Characterisation of the Circulating Transcriptomic Landscape in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Provides Evidence for Dysregulation of Multiple Transcription Factors Including NFE2, SPI1, CEBPB, and IRF2

Jan Krzysztof Nowak(Poznan University of Medical Sciences), Alex Adams(John Radcliffe Hospital), Rahul Kalla(Centre for Inflammation Research), Jonas Christoffer Lindstrøm(University of Oslo), Simen Vatn(University of Oslo), Daniel Bergemalm(Örebro University), Åsa V. Keita(Linköping University), Fernando Gomollón(Hospital Clínico Universitario Lozano Blesa), Jørgen Jahnsen(University of Oslo), Morten H. Vatn(University of Oslo), Petr Ricanek(Akershus University Hospital), Jerzy Ostrowski(National Institute of Oncology), Jarosław Walkowiak(Poznan University of Medical Sciences), Jonas Halfvarson(Örebro University), Jack Satsangi(John Radcliffe Hospital), Erik Andersson, Ian Arnott, Mónica Bayés, Ferdinando Bonfiglio, Ray Boyapati, Adam Carstens(John Radcliffe Hospital), Christina Casèn, Ewa Ciemniejewska, Mauro D’Amato, Fredrik A. Dahl, Trond Espen Detlie, Hazel E. Drummond, Gunn S. Ekeland, Daniel Ekman(Örebro University), Anna B. Frengen, Mats Gullberg, Marta Gut, Marta Gut, Simon Heath, Fredrik Hjelm, Henrik Hjortswang, Gwo‐Tzer Ho, Daisy Jonkers, Nicholas A. Kennedy, Charles W Lees, Torbjørn Lindahl, C. Lindqvist, Angelika Merkel, Eddie Modig, Aina Elisabeth Fossum Moen, Hilde Nilsen, Elaine R. Nimmo, Colin Noble, Niklas Nordberg, Kate O'Leary, Anette Ocklind, Christine Olbjørn, Erik Pettersson, Marieke Pierik, Dominique Poncelet, Dirk Repsilber, Céline Sabatel, Renaud Schoemans, Alan G. Shand, Johan D. Söderholm, Janne Sølvernes, Mikael Sundell, Tone M Tannæs, Leif Törkvist, Anne-Clémence Veillard, Nicholas T. Ventham, David C. Wilson, Panpan You
Journal of Crohn s and Colitis
February 23, 2022
Cited by 50Open Access
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Abstract

AIM: To assess the pathobiological and translational importance of whole-blood transcriptomic analysis in inflammatory bowel disease [IBD]. METHODS: We analysed whole-blood expression profiles from paired-end sequencing in a discovery cohort of 590 Europeans recruited across six countries in the IBD Character initiative (newly diagnosed patients with Crohn's disease [CD; n = 156], ulcerative colitis [UC; n = 167], and controls [n = 267]), exploring differential expression [DESeq2], co-expression networks [WGCNA], and transcription factor involvement [EPEE, ChEA, DoRothEA]. Findings were validated by analysis of an independent replication cohort [99 CD, 100 UC, 95 controls]. In the discovery cohort, we also defined baseline expression correlates of future treatment escalation using cross-validated elastic-net and random forest modelling, along with a pragmatic ratio detection procedure. RESULTS: Disease-specific transcriptomes were defined in IBD [8697 transcripts], CD [7152], and UC [8521], with the most highly significant changes in single genes, including CD177 (log2-fold change [LFC] = 4.63, p = 4.05 × 10-118), MCEMP1 [LFC = 2.45, p = 7.37 × 10-109], and S100A12 [LFC = 2.31, p = 2.15 × 10-93]. Significantly over-represented pathways included IL-1 [p = 1.58 × 10-11], IL-4, and IL-13 [p = 8.96 × 10-9]. Highly concordant results were obtained using multiple regulatory activity inference tools applied to the discovery and replication cohorts. These analyses demonstrated central roles in IBD for the transcription factors NFE2, SPI1 [PU.1], CEBPB, and IRF2, all regulators of cytokine signalling, based on a consistent signal across cohorts and transcription factor ranking methods. A number of simple transcriptome-based models were associated with the need for treatment escalation, including the binary CLEC5A/CDH2 expression ratio in UC (hazard ratio = 23.4, 95% confidence interval [CI] 5.3-102.0). CONCLUSIONS: Transcriptomic analysis has allowed for a detailed characterisation of IBD pathobiology, with important potential translational implications.


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