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The Utility of Resolving Asthma Molecular Signatures Using Tissue-Specific Transcriptome Data

An integrative analysis focused on multi-tissue transcriptomics has not been done for asthma. Tissue-specific DEGs remain undetected in many multi-tissue analyses, which influences identification of disease-relevant pathways and potential drug candidates. Transcriptome data from 609 cases and 196 co...

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Autores principales: Ghosh, Debajyoti, Ding, Lili, Bernstein, Jonathan A., Mersha, Tesfaye B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Genetics Society of America 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7642926/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32900903
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.120.401718
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author Ghosh, Debajyoti
Ding, Lili
Bernstein, Jonathan A.
Mersha, Tesfaye B.
author_facet Ghosh, Debajyoti
Ding, Lili
Bernstein, Jonathan A.
Mersha, Tesfaye B.
author_sort Ghosh, Debajyoti
collection PubMed
description An integrative analysis focused on multi-tissue transcriptomics has not been done for asthma. Tissue-specific DEGs remain undetected in many multi-tissue analyses, which influences identification of disease-relevant pathways and potential drug candidates. Transcriptome data from 609 cases and 196 controls, generated using airway epithelium, bronchial, nasal, airway macrophages, distal lung fibroblasts, proximal lung fibroblasts, CD4+ lymphocytes, CD8+ lymphocytes from whole blood and induced sputum samples, were retrieved from Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO). Differentially regulated asthma-relevant genes identified from each sample type were used to identify (a) tissue-specific and tissue–shared asthma pathways, (b) their connection to GWAS-identified disease genes to identify candidate tissue for functional studies, (c) to select surrogate sample for invasive tissues, and finally (d) to identify potential drug candidates via connectivity map analysis. We found that inter-tissue similarity in gene expression was more pronounced at pathway/functional level than at gene level with highest similarity between bronchial epithelial cells and lung fibroblasts, and lowest between airway epithelium and whole blood samples. Although public-domain gene expression data are limited by inadequately annotated per-sample demographic and clinical information which limited the analysis, our tissue-resolved analysis clearly demonstrated relative importance of unique and shared asthma pathways, At the pathway level, IL-1b signaling and ERK signaling were significant in many tissue types, while Insulin-like growth factor and TGF-beta signaling were relevant in only airway epithelial tissue. IL-12 (in macrophages) and Immunoglobulin signaling (in lymphocytes) and chemokines (in nasal epithelium) were the highest expressed pathways. Overall, the IL-1 signaling genes (inflammatory) were relevant in the airway compartment, while pro-Th2 genes including IL-13 and STAT6 were more relevant in fibroblasts, lymphocytes, macrophages and bronchial biopsies. These genes were also associated with asthma in the GWAS catalog. Support Vector Machine showed that DEGs based on macrophages and epithelial cells have the highest and lowest discriminatory accuracy, respectively. Drug (entinostat, BMS-345541) and genetic perturbagens (KLF6, BCL10, INFB1 and BAMBI) negatively connected to disease at multi-tissue level could potentially repurposed for treating asthma. Collectively, our study indicates that the DEGs, perturbagens and disease are connected differentially depending on tissue/cell types. While most of the existing literature describes asthma transcriptome data from individual sample types, the present work demonstrates the utility of multi-tissue transcriptome data. Future studies should focus on collecting transcriptomic data from multiple tissues, age and race groups, genetic background, disease subtypes and on the availability of better-annotated data in the public domain.
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spelling pubmed-76429262020-11-13 The Utility of Resolving Asthma Molecular Signatures Using Tissue-Specific Transcriptome Data Ghosh, Debajyoti Ding, Lili Bernstein, Jonathan A. Mersha, Tesfaye B. G3 (Bethesda) Investigations An integrative analysis focused on multi-tissue transcriptomics has not been done for asthma. Tissue-specific DEGs remain undetected in many multi-tissue analyses, which influences identification of disease-relevant pathways and potential drug candidates. Transcriptome data from 609 cases and 196 controls, generated using airway epithelium, bronchial, nasal, airway macrophages, distal lung fibroblasts, proximal lung fibroblasts, CD4+ lymphocytes, CD8+ lymphocytes from whole blood and induced sputum samples, were retrieved from Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO). Differentially regulated asthma-relevant genes identified from each sample type were used to identify (a) tissue-specific and tissue–shared asthma pathways, (b) their connection to GWAS-identified disease genes to identify candidate tissue for functional studies, (c) to select surrogate sample for invasive tissues, and finally (d) to identify potential drug candidates via connectivity map analysis. We found that inter-tissue similarity in gene expression was more pronounced at pathway/functional level than at gene level with highest similarity between bronchial epithelial cells and lung fibroblasts, and lowest between airway epithelium and whole blood samples. Although public-domain gene expression data are limited by inadequately annotated per-sample demographic and clinical information which limited the analysis, our tissue-resolved analysis clearly demonstrated relative importance of unique and shared asthma pathways, At the pathway level, IL-1b signaling and ERK signaling were significant in many tissue types, while Insulin-like growth factor and TGF-beta signaling were relevant in only airway epithelial tissue. IL-12 (in macrophages) and Immunoglobulin signaling (in lymphocytes) and chemokines (in nasal epithelium) were the highest expressed pathways. Overall, the IL-1 signaling genes (inflammatory) were relevant in the airway compartment, while pro-Th2 genes including IL-13 and STAT6 were more relevant in fibroblasts, lymphocytes, macrophages and bronchial biopsies. These genes were also associated with asthma in the GWAS catalog. Support Vector Machine showed that DEGs based on macrophages and epithelial cells have the highest and lowest discriminatory accuracy, respectively. Drug (entinostat, BMS-345541) and genetic perturbagens (KLF6, BCL10, INFB1 and BAMBI) negatively connected to disease at multi-tissue level could potentially repurposed for treating asthma. Collectively, our study indicates that the DEGs, perturbagens and disease are connected differentially depending on tissue/cell types. While most of the existing literature describes asthma transcriptome data from individual sample types, the present work demonstrates the utility of multi-tissue transcriptome data. Future studies should focus on collecting transcriptomic data from multiple tissues, age and race groups, genetic background, disease subtypes and on the availability of better-annotated data in the public domain. Genetics Society of America 2020-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7642926/ /pubmed/32900903 http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.120.401718 Text en Copyright © 2020 Ghosh et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Investigations
Ghosh, Debajyoti
Ding, Lili
Bernstein, Jonathan A.
Mersha, Tesfaye B.
The Utility of Resolving Asthma Molecular Signatures Using Tissue-Specific Transcriptome Data
title The Utility of Resolving Asthma Molecular Signatures Using Tissue-Specific Transcriptome Data
title_full The Utility of Resolving Asthma Molecular Signatures Using Tissue-Specific Transcriptome Data
title_fullStr The Utility of Resolving Asthma Molecular Signatures Using Tissue-Specific Transcriptome Data
title_full_unstemmed The Utility of Resolving Asthma Molecular Signatures Using Tissue-Specific Transcriptome Data
title_short The Utility of Resolving Asthma Molecular Signatures Using Tissue-Specific Transcriptome Data
title_sort utility of resolving asthma molecular signatures using tissue-specific transcriptome data
topic Investigations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7642926/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32900903
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.120.401718
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