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Probing predilection to Crohn's disease and Crohn's disease flares: A crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach

BACKGROUND: Crohn's Disease (CD) is an inflammatory disease of the gastrointestinal tract that affects millions of patients. While great strides have been made in treatment, namely in biologic therapy such as anti-TNF drugs, CD remains a significant health burden. METHOD: We conducted two meta-...

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Autores principales: Aljabban, Jihad, Rohr, Michael, Borkowski, Vincent J., Nemer, Mary, Cohen, Eli, Hashi, Naima, Aljabban, Hisham, Boateng, Emmanuel, Syed, Saad, Mohammed, Mohammed, Mukhtar, Ali, Hadley, Dexter, Panahiazar, Maryam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9576970/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36268056
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpi.2022.100094
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author Aljabban, Jihad
Rohr, Michael
Borkowski, Vincent J.
Nemer, Mary
Cohen, Eli
Hashi, Naima
Aljabban, Hisham
Boateng, Emmanuel
Syed, Saad
Mohammed, Mohammed
Mukhtar, Ali
Hadley, Dexter
Panahiazar, Maryam
author_facet Aljabban, Jihad
Rohr, Michael
Borkowski, Vincent J.
Nemer, Mary
Cohen, Eli
Hashi, Naima
Aljabban, Hisham
Boateng, Emmanuel
Syed, Saad
Mohammed, Mohammed
Mukhtar, Ali
Hadley, Dexter
Panahiazar, Maryam
author_sort Aljabban, Jihad
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Crohn's Disease (CD) is an inflammatory disease of the gastrointestinal tract that affects millions of patients. While great strides have been made in treatment, namely in biologic therapy such as anti-TNF drugs, CD remains a significant health burden. METHOD: We conducted two meta-analyses using our STARGEO platform to tag samples from Gene Expression Omnibus. One analysis compares inactive colonic biopsies from CD patients to colonic biopsies from healthy patients as a control and the other compares colonic biopsies from active CD lesions to inactive lesions. Separate tags were created to tag colonic samples from inflamed biopsies (total of 65 samples) and quiescent tissue in CD patients (total of 39 samples), and healthy tissue from non-CD patients (total of 30 samples). Results from the two meta-analyses were analyzed using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis. RESULTS: For the inactive CD vs healthy tissue analysis, we noted FXR/RXR and LXR/RXR activation, superpathway of citrulline metabolism, and atherosclerosis signaling as top canonical pathways. The top upstream regulators include genes implicated in innate immunity, such as TLR3 and HNRNPA2B1, and sterol regulation through SREBF2. In addition, the sterol regulator SREBF2, lipid metabolism was the top disease network identified in IPA (Fig. 1). Top upregulated genes hold implications in innate immunity (DUOX2, REG1A/1B/3A) and cellular transport and absorption (ABCG5, NPC1L1, FOLH1, and SLC6A14). Top downregulated genes largely held roles in cell adhesion and integrity, including claudin 8, PAQR5, and PRKACB. For the active vs inactive CD analysis, we found immune cell adhesion and diapedesis, hepatic fibrosis/hepatic stellate cell activation, LPS/IL-1 inhibition of RXR function, and atherosclerosis as top canonical pathways. Top upstream regulators included inflammatory mediators LPS, TNF, IL1B, and TGFB1. Top upregulated genes function in the immune response such as IL6, CXCL1, CXCR2, MMP1/7/12, and PTGS2. Downregulated genes dealt with cellular metabolism and transport such as CPO, RBP2, G6PC, PCK1, GSTA1, and MEP1B. CONCLUSION: Our results build off established and recently described research in the field of CD. We demonstrate the use of our user-friendly platform, STARGEO, in investigating disease and finding therapeutic avenues.
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spelling pubmed-95769702022-10-19 Probing predilection to Crohn's disease and Crohn's disease flares: A crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach Aljabban, Jihad Rohr, Michael Borkowski, Vincent J. Nemer, Mary Cohen, Eli Hashi, Naima Aljabban, Hisham Boateng, Emmanuel Syed, Saad Mohammed, Mohammed Mukhtar, Ali Hadley, Dexter Panahiazar, Maryam J Pathol Inform Original Research Article BACKGROUND: Crohn's Disease (CD) is an inflammatory disease of the gastrointestinal tract that affects millions of patients. While great strides have been made in treatment, namely in biologic therapy such as anti-TNF drugs, CD remains a significant health burden. METHOD: We conducted two meta-analyses using our STARGEO platform to tag samples from Gene Expression Omnibus. One analysis compares inactive colonic biopsies from CD patients to colonic biopsies from healthy patients as a control and the other compares colonic biopsies from active CD lesions to inactive lesions. Separate tags were created to tag colonic samples from inflamed biopsies (total of 65 samples) and quiescent tissue in CD patients (total of 39 samples), and healthy tissue from non-CD patients (total of 30 samples). Results from the two meta-analyses were analyzed using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis. RESULTS: For the inactive CD vs healthy tissue analysis, we noted FXR/RXR and LXR/RXR activation, superpathway of citrulline metabolism, and atherosclerosis signaling as top canonical pathways. The top upstream regulators include genes implicated in innate immunity, such as TLR3 and HNRNPA2B1, and sterol regulation through SREBF2. In addition, the sterol regulator SREBF2, lipid metabolism was the top disease network identified in IPA (Fig. 1). Top upregulated genes hold implications in innate immunity (DUOX2, REG1A/1B/3A) and cellular transport and absorption (ABCG5, NPC1L1, FOLH1, and SLC6A14). Top downregulated genes largely held roles in cell adhesion and integrity, including claudin 8, PAQR5, and PRKACB. For the active vs inactive CD analysis, we found immune cell adhesion and diapedesis, hepatic fibrosis/hepatic stellate cell activation, LPS/IL-1 inhibition of RXR function, and atherosclerosis as top canonical pathways. Top upstream regulators included inflammatory mediators LPS, TNF, IL1B, and TGFB1. Top upregulated genes function in the immune response such as IL6, CXCL1, CXCR2, MMP1/7/12, and PTGS2. Downregulated genes dealt with cellular metabolism and transport such as CPO, RBP2, G6PC, PCK1, GSTA1, and MEP1B. CONCLUSION: Our results build off established and recently described research in the field of CD. We demonstrate the use of our user-friendly platform, STARGEO, in investigating disease and finding therapeutic avenues. Elsevier 2022-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9576970/ /pubmed/36268056 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpi.2022.100094 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research Article
Aljabban, Jihad
Rohr, Michael
Borkowski, Vincent J.
Nemer, Mary
Cohen, Eli
Hashi, Naima
Aljabban, Hisham
Boateng, Emmanuel
Syed, Saad
Mohammed, Mohammed
Mukhtar, Ali
Hadley, Dexter
Panahiazar, Maryam
Probing predilection to Crohn's disease and Crohn's disease flares: A crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach
title Probing predilection to Crohn's disease and Crohn's disease flares: A crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach
title_full Probing predilection to Crohn's disease and Crohn's disease flares: A crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach
title_fullStr Probing predilection to Crohn's disease and Crohn's disease flares: A crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach
title_full_unstemmed Probing predilection to Crohn's disease and Crohn's disease flares: A crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach
title_short Probing predilection to Crohn's disease and Crohn's disease flares: A crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach
title_sort probing predilection to crohn's disease and crohn's disease flares: a crowd-sourced bioinformatics approach
topic Original Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9576970/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36268056
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpi.2022.100094
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