Discovery and analysis of inflammatory disease-related genes using cDNA microarrays

Renu A. Heller(Manchester Royal Infirmary), Mark Schena(Manchester Royal Infirmary), Andrew Chai(Manchester Royal Infirmary), Dari Shalon(Manchester Royal Infirmary), Tod Bedilion(Manchester Royal Infirmary), James Gilmore(Manchester Royal Infirmary), David E. Woolley(Manchester Royal Infirmary), Ronald W. Davis(Manchester Royal Infirmary)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 18, 1997
Cited by 724Open Access

Abstract

cDNA microarray technology is used to profile complex diseases and discover novel disease-related genes. In inflammatory disease such as rheumatoid arthritis, expression patterns of diverse cell types contribute to the pathology. We have monitored gene expression in this disease state with a microarray of selected human genes of probable significance in inflammation as well as with genes expressed in peripheral human blood cells. Messenger RNA from cultured macrophages, chondrocyte cell lines, primary chondrocytes, and synoviocytes provided expression profiles for the selected cytokines, chemokines, DNA binding proteins, and matrix-degrading metalloproteinases. Comparisons between tissue samples of rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory bowel disease verified the involvement of many genes and revealed novel participation of the cytokine interleukin 3, chemokine Gro alpha and the metalloproteinase matrix metallo-elastase in both diseases. From the peripheral blood library, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1, ferritin light chain, and manganese superoxide dismutase genes were identified as expressed differentially in rheumatoid arthritis compared with inflammatory bowel disease. These results successfully demonstrate the use of the cDNA microarray system as a general approach for dissecting human diseases.


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