Cargando…

Ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) affects 1 in 537 Black women, which is >2-fold more than White women. Black patients develop the disease at a younger age, have more severe symptoms, and have a greater chance of early mortality. We used a multiomics approach to uncover ancestry-associated immun...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Slight-Webb, Samantha, Thomas, Kevin, Smith, Miles, Wagner, Catriona A., Macwana, Susan, Bylinska, Aleksandra, Donato, Michele, Dvorak, Mai, Chang, Sarah E., Kuo, Alex, Cheung, Peggie, Kalesinskas, Laurynas, Ganesan, Ananthakrishnan, Dermadi, Denis, Guthridge, Carla J., DeJager, Wade, Wright, Christian, Foecke, Mariko H., Merrill, Joan T., Chakravarty, Eliza, Arriens, Cristina, Maecker, Holden T., Khatri, Purvesh, Utz, Paul J., James, Judith A., Guthridge, Joel M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10543734/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37606045
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.169584
_version_ 1785114346879188992
author Slight-Webb, Samantha
Thomas, Kevin
Smith, Miles
Wagner, Catriona A.
Macwana, Susan
Bylinska, Aleksandra
Donato, Michele
Dvorak, Mai
Chang, Sarah E.
Kuo, Alex
Cheung, Peggie
Kalesinskas, Laurynas
Ganesan, Ananthakrishnan
Dermadi, Denis
Guthridge, Carla J.
DeJager, Wade
Wright, Christian
Foecke, Mariko H.
Merrill, Joan T.
Chakravarty, Eliza
Arriens, Cristina
Maecker, Holden T.
Khatri, Purvesh
Utz, Paul J.
James, Judith A.
Guthridge, Joel M.
author_facet Slight-Webb, Samantha
Thomas, Kevin
Smith, Miles
Wagner, Catriona A.
Macwana, Susan
Bylinska, Aleksandra
Donato, Michele
Dvorak, Mai
Chang, Sarah E.
Kuo, Alex
Cheung, Peggie
Kalesinskas, Laurynas
Ganesan, Ananthakrishnan
Dermadi, Denis
Guthridge, Carla J.
DeJager, Wade
Wright, Christian
Foecke, Mariko H.
Merrill, Joan T.
Chakravarty, Eliza
Arriens, Cristina
Maecker, Holden T.
Khatri, Purvesh
Utz, Paul J.
James, Judith A.
Guthridge, Joel M.
author_sort Slight-Webb, Samantha
collection PubMed
description Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) affects 1 in 537 Black women, which is >2-fold more than White women. Black patients develop the disease at a younger age, have more severe symptoms, and have a greater chance of early mortality. We used a multiomics approach to uncover ancestry-associated immune alterations in patients with SLE and healthy controls that may contribute biologically to disease disparities. Cell composition, signaling, epigenetics, and proteomics were evaluated by mass cytometry; droplet-based single-cell transcriptomics and proteomics; and bead-based multiplex soluble mediator levels in plasma. We observed altered whole blood frequencies and enhanced activity in CD8(+) T cells, B cells, monocytes, and DCs in Black patients with more active disease. Epigenetic modifications in CD8(+) T cells (H3K27ac) could distinguish disease activity level in Black patients and differentiate Black from White patient samples. TLR3/4/7/8/9-related gene expression was elevated in immune cells from Black patients with SLE, and TLR7/8/9 and IFN-α phospho-signaling and cytokine responses were heightened even in immune cells from healthy Black control patients compared with White individuals. TLR stimulation of healthy immune cells recapitulated the ancestry-associated SLE immunophenotypes. This multiomic resource defines ancestry-associated immune phenotypes that differ between Black and White patients with SLE, which may influence the course and severity of SLE and other diseases.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10543734
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher American Society for Clinical Investigation
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105437342023-10-03 Ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity Slight-Webb, Samantha Thomas, Kevin Smith, Miles Wagner, Catriona A. Macwana, Susan Bylinska, Aleksandra Donato, Michele Dvorak, Mai Chang, Sarah E. Kuo, Alex Cheung, Peggie Kalesinskas, Laurynas Ganesan, Ananthakrishnan Dermadi, Denis Guthridge, Carla J. DeJager, Wade Wright, Christian Foecke, Mariko H. Merrill, Joan T. Chakravarty, Eliza Arriens, Cristina Maecker, Holden T. Khatri, Purvesh Utz, Paul J. James, Judith A. Guthridge, Joel M. JCI Insight Technical Advance Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) affects 1 in 537 Black women, which is >2-fold more than White women. Black patients develop the disease at a younger age, have more severe symptoms, and have a greater chance of early mortality. We used a multiomics approach to uncover ancestry-associated immune alterations in patients with SLE and healthy controls that may contribute biologically to disease disparities. Cell composition, signaling, epigenetics, and proteomics were evaluated by mass cytometry; droplet-based single-cell transcriptomics and proteomics; and bead-based multiplex soluble mediator levels in plasma. We observed altered whole blood frequencies and enhanced activity in CD8(+) T cells, B cells, monocytes, and DCs in Black patients with more active disease. Epigenetic modifications in CD8(+) T cells (H3K27ac) could distinguish disease activity level in Black patients and differentiate Black from White patient samples. TLR3/4/7/8/9-related gene expression was elevated in immune cells from Black patients with SLE, and TLR7/8/9 and IFN-α phospho-signaling and cytokine responses were heightened even in immune cells from healthy Black control patients compared with White individuals. TLR stimulation of healthy immune cells recapitulated the ancestry-associated SLE immunophenotypes. This multiomic resource defines ancestry-associated immune phenotypes that differ between Black and White patients with SLE, which may influence the course and severity of SLE and other diseases. American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10543734/ /pubmed/37606045 http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.169584 Text en © 2023 Slight-Webb et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Technical Advance
Slight-Webb, Samantha
Thomas, Kevin
Smith, Miles
Wagner, Catriona A.
Macwana, Susan
Bylinska, Aleksandra
Donato, Michele
Dvorak, Mai
Chang, Sarah E.
Kuo, Alex
Cheung, Peggie
Kalesinskas, Laurynas
Ganesan, Ananthakrishnan
Dermadi, Denis
Guthridge, Carla J.
DeJager, Wade
Wright, Christian
Foecke, Mariko H.
Merrill, Joan T.
Chakravarty, Eliza
Arriens, Cristina
Maecker, Holden T.
Khatri, Purvesh
Utz, Paul J.
James, Judith A.
Guthridge, Joel M.
Ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity
title Ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity
title_full Ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity
title_fullStr Ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity
title_full_unstemmed Ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity
title_short Ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity
title_sort ancestry-based differences in the immune phenotype are associated with lupus activity
topic Technical Advance
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10543734/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37606045
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.169584
work_keys_str_mv AT slightwebbsamantha ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT thomaskevin ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT smithmiles ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT wagnercatrionaa ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT macwanasusan ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT bylinskaaleksandra ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT donatomichele ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT dvorakmai ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT changsarahe ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT kuoalex ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT cheungpeggie ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT kalesinskaslaurynas ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT ganesanananthakrishnan ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT dermadidenis ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT guthridgecarlaj ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT dejagerwade ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT wrightchristian ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT foeckemarikoh ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT merrilljoant ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT chakravartyeliza ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT arrienscristina ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT maeckerholdent ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT khatripurvesh ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT utzpaulj ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT jamesjuditha ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity
AT guthridgejoelm ancestrybaseddifferencesintheimmunephenotypeareassociatedwithlupusactivity