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Effect of infliximab on mRNA expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients

We examined the gene expression profiles in arthroscopic biopsies retrieved from 10 rheumatoid arthritis patients before and after anti-TNF treatment with infliximab to investigate whether such profiles can be used to predict responses to the therapy, and to study effects of the therapy on the profi...

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Autores principales: Lindberg, Johan, af Klint, Erik, Catrina, Anca Irinel, Nilsson, Peter, Klareskog, Lars, Ulfgren, Ann-Kristin, Lundeberg, Joakim
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1794525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17134501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2090
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author Lindberg, Johan
af Klint, Erik
Catrina, Anca Irinel
Nilsson, Peter
Klareskog, Lars
Ulfgren, Ann-Kristin
Lundeberg, Joakim
author_facet Lindberg, Johan
af Klint, Erik
Catrina, Anca Irinel
Nilsson, Peter
Klareskog, Lars
Ulfgren, Ann-Kristin
Lundeberg, Joakim
author_sort Lindberg, Johan
collection PubMed
description We examined the gene expression profiles in arthroscopic biopsies retrieved from 10 rheumatoid arthritis patients before and after anti-TNF treatment with infliximab to investigate whether such profiles can be used to predict responses to the therapy, and to study effects of the therapy on the profiles. Responses to treatment were assessed using European League Against Rheumatism response criteria. Three patients were found to be good responders, five patients to be moderate responders and two patients to be nonresponders. The TNF-α status of the biopsies from each of the patients before treatment was also investigated immunohistochemically, and it was detected in biopsies from four of the patients, including all three of the good responders. The gene expression data demonstrate that all patients had unique gene expression signatures, with low intrapatient variability between biopsies. The data also revealed significant differences between the good responding and nonresponding patients (279 differentially expressed genes were detected, with a false discovery rate < 0.025). Among the identified genes we found that MMP-3 was significantly upregulated in good responders (log(2 )fold change, 2.95) compared with nonresponders, providing further support for the potential of MMP-3 as a marker for good responses to therapy. An even more extensive list of 685 significantly differentially expressed genes was found between patients in whom TNF-α was found and nonresponders, indicating that TNF-α could be an important biomarker for successful infliximab treatment. Significant differences were also observed between biopsies taken before and after anti-TNF treatment, including 115 differentially expressed genes in the good responding group. Interestingly, the effect was even stronger in the group in which TNF-α was immunohistochemically detected before therapy. Here, 1,058 genes were differentially expressed, including many that were novel in this context (for example, CXCL3 and CXCL14). Subsequent Gene Ontology analysis revealed that several 'themes' were significantly over-represented that are known to be affected by anti-TNF treatment in inflammatory tissue; for example, immune response (GO:0006955), cell communication (GO:0007154), signal transduction (GO:0007165) and chemotaxis (GO:0006935). No genes reached statistical significance in the moderately responding or nonresponding groups. In conclusion, this pilot study suggests that further investigation is warranted on the usefulness of gene expression profiling of synovial tissue to predict and monitor the outcome of rheumatoid arthritis therapies.
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spelling pubmed-17945252007-02-08 Effect of infliximab on mRNA expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients Lindberg, Johan af Klint, Erik Catrina, Anca Irinel Nilsson, Peter Klareskog, Lars Ulfgren, Ann-Kristin Lundeberg, Joakim Arthritis Res Ther Research Article We examined the gene expression profiles in arthroscopic biopsies retrieved from 10 rheumatoid arthritis patients before and after anti-TNF treatment with infliximab to investigate whether such profiles can be used to predict responses to the therapy, and to study effects of the therapy on the profiles. Responses to treatment were assessed using European League Against Rheumatism response criteria. Three patients were found to be good responders, five patients to be moderate responders and two patients to be nonresponders. The TNF-α status of the biopsies from each of the patients before treatment was also investigated immunohistochemically, and it was detected in biopsies from four of the patients, including all three of the good responders. The gene expression data demonstrate that all patients had unique gene expression signatures, with low intrapatient variability between biopsies. The data also revealed significant differences between the good responding and nonresponding patients (279 differentially expressed genes were detected, with a false discovery rate < 0.025). Among the identified genes we found that MMP-3 was significantly upregulated in good responders (log(2 )fold change, 2.95) compared with nonresponders, providing further support for the potential of MMP-3 as a marker for good responses to therapy. An even more extensive list of 685 significantly differentially expressed genes was found between patients in whom TNF-α was found and nonresponders, indicating that TNF-α could be an important biomarker for successful infliximab treatment. Significant differences were also observed between biopsies taken before and after anti-TNF treatment, including 115 differentially expressed genes in the good responding group. Interestingly, the effect was even stronger in the group in which TNF-α was immunohistochemically detected before therapy. Here, 1,058 genes were differentially expressed, including many that were novel in this context (for example, CXCL3 and CXCL14). Subsequent Gene Ontology analysis revealed that several 'themes' were significantly over-represented that are known to be affected by anti-TNF treatment in inflammatory tissue; for example, immune response (GO:0006955), cell communication (GO:0007154), signal transduction (GO:0007165) and chemotaxis (GO:0006935). No genes reached statistical significance in the moderately responding or nonresponding groups. In conclusion, this pilot study suggests that further investigation is warranted on the usefulness of gene expression profiling of synovial tissue to predict and monitor the outcome of rheumatoid arthritis therapies. BioMed Central 2006 2006-11-29 /pmc/articles/PMC1794525/ /pubmed/17134501 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2090 Text en Copyright © 2006 Lindberg et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lindberg, Johan
af Klint, Erik
Catrina, Anca Irinel
Nilsson, Peter
Klareskog, Lars
Ulfgren, Ann-Kristin
Lundeberg, Joakim
Effect of infliximab on mRNA expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients
title Effect of infliximab on mRNA expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients
title_full Effect of infliximab on mRNA expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients
title_fullStr Effect of infliximab on mRNA expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients
title_full_unstemmed Effect of infliximab on mRNA expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients
title_short Effect of infliximab on mRNA expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients
title_sort effect of infliximab on mrna expression profiles in synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1794525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17134501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2090
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