scholarly journals O11 Lymphocyte DNA methylation mediates genetic risk at RA risk loci that are shared with other immune mediated diseases

Rheumatology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 59 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander D Clark ◽  
Nisha Nair ◽  
Amy E Anderson ◽  
Nishanthi Thalayasingam ◽  
Najib Naamane ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The aetiology of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is complex. In particular, the vast majority of disease-associated variants implicated by genome-wide association studies are non-coding, leaving genetic mechanisms of adaptive immune dysregulation unresolved. The contribution to this process of epigenetic factors, including the addition of methyl groups to DNA, also remains uncertain. To address these issues and prioritise causal genes for downstream study, genome-wide data incorporating DNA methylation and gene expression measurements from lymphocyte subsets in an early arthritis inception cohort, were available. Methods Whole genome methylation and transcription data from isolated CD4+ T cells and B cells of > 100 well-characterised inflammatory arthritis patients, all of whom were naïve to immunomodulatory treatments and of Northern European ancestry, were obtained (Illumina HumanHT-12 v4 Expression BeadChip and Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip arrays, respectively). Genotyping was undertaken using the Illumina Human CoreExome-24 version 1-0 array. After independent pre-processing, normalisation and quality control of paired CD4+ and B lymphocyte data, methylation quantitative trait loci (meQTLs) were first modelled using the MatrixEQTL package in each cell type. Next, at RA risk-associated cis-CpGs, correlations between site-specific methylation and the expression of genes within ±500Kb identified quantitative trait methylations (eQTMs). To infer directionality of SNP-CpG-transcript associations a causal inference test (CIT) was applied. Multiple testing was accounted for, and in vitro assays were used to validate meQTLs at loci of interest and confirm regulatory mechanisms. Further analysis integrated GWAS data from other immune mediated diseases (IMDs) and additional publically available resources. Results We found strong evidence that disease-associated DNA variants regulate cis-CpG methylation of DNA in CD4+ T and/or B cells at 37% RA loci. In general we observed these variants to preferentially modify methylation at sites mapping to lymphocyte enhancers and regions flanking transcription start sites, and at positions bound by the NFκB transcription factor. Using paired, cell-specific transcriptomic data and a statistical approach to infer causality, we then identified examples where site-specific DNA methylation in turn mediates gene expression, including ORMDL3/GSDMB, IL6ST/ANKRD55, FCRL3 and JAZF1 in CD4+ lymphocytes. Leveraging GWAS data we noted that a number of genes regulated in this way highlight mechanisms common to RA, multiple sclerosis and asthma, distinguishing these IMDs from osteoarthritis which is considered a primarily degenerative disease. To validate our findings, cis-meQTL effects at sentinel loci were replicated by pyrosequencing in an independent cohort of genotyped early arthritis patients, and methylation-mediated regulation of FCRL3 expression downstream of the regulatory SNP was confirmed experimentally using a luciferase reporter assay in Jurkat T-cells. Conclusion Our observations highlight important mechanisms of genetic risk in RA and the wider context of autoimmunity. They confirm the utility of DNA methylation profiling as a tool for causal gene prioritisation and, potentially, therapeutic targeting in complex IMD. Disclosures A.D. Clark None. N. Nair None. A.E. Anderson None. N. Thalayasingam None. N. Naamane None. A.J. Skelton None. J. Diboll None. A. Barton None. S. Eyre None. J.D. Isaacs None. L.N. Reynard None. A.G. Pratt Grants/research support; I am a recipient of an unrestricted, investigator initiated research grant from Pfizer, paid to Newcastle University.

2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 214.1-214
Author(s):  
I. Arias de la Rosa ◽  
M. D. López Montilla ◽  
J. Rodríguez ◽  
E. Ballester ◽  
C. Torres-Granados ◽  
...  

Background:Cardiovascular risk factors are increased in Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA). In fact, around 60% out of PsA patients display insulin resistance (IR), a hallmark of metabolic syndrome, which might significantly contribute to the cardiovascular disease. Latest studies suggested that inflammatory and metabolic disorders may be under epigenetic control, including DNA methylation. DNA methylation is an unexplored area in the field of PsA.Objectives:To study the alterations in the genome-wide DNA methylation profile of CD4+T cells from PsA patients and its relationship with its pathology and the risk of cardiovascular comorbidity.Methods:Twenty healthy controls (HC) and 20 PsA patients were included in the study. PsA patients were classified into insulin resistant and non-insulin resistant according to HOMA-IR index. CD4+T lymphocytes were isolated from peripheral blood by positive immunomagnetic selection. The Illumina Infinium MethylationEPIC Beadchip was used to obtain DNA methylation profiles across approximately 850,000 CpGs (TSS1500, TSS200, 5UTR, 3UTR, first exon, gene body). Beta values (β) estimating methylation levels were obtained at each CpG site, and differentially methylated genes (DMG) between PsA and HC were identified. Functional classification of these genes was carried out through gene ontology analysis (PANTHER database). Gene expression analysis of the selected genes was also evaluated by RT-PCR. Vascular parameters including carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT) and endothelial function was analyzed by ecodoppler and periflux respectively.Results:The genome-wide methylation analysis identified 112 DMGs including 41 hypomethylated and 71 hypermethylated. These differentially methylated genes were enriched with several signaling pathways and disease categories including immune response, metabolic processes, oxidative stress, vascular and inflammatory pathways. The altered gene expression of selected genes with altered methylation levels in PsA was also validated. Correlation and association analysis of these DMGs with clinical and analytical variables, cardiovascular risk factors and endothelial microvascular function revealed that the degree of methylation of these genes was significantly associated with cIMT (IGF1R, NDRG3, SMYD3, HLA-DRB1, WDR70), arterial pressure (METT5D1, NRDG3, ADAM17, SMYD3, WNK1, CBX1), insulin resistance (AKAP13, SEMA6D, PLCB1), altered lipid profile and atherogenic index (MYBL1, METT5D1, MAN2A1, SLC1A7, SEMA6D, PLCB1, TLK1, SDK1, CBX1), inflammation (MYBL1, NDUFA5, METT5D1, SEMA6D, PLCB1, TLK1), and endothelial dysfunction (ADAMST10, GPCPD1, CCDC88A). In addition, this analysis also identified 435 DMGs including 280 hypomethylated and 155 hypermethylated in CD4+T cells from IR-PsA vs non IR-PsA patients. Between these two groups of PsA patients, CHUK, SERINC1, RUNX1, TTYH2, TXNDC11, FAF1, BICD1, SCD5, PDE5A, FAS, NFIA and GRP75 displayed the most significantly altered methylation, suggesting the role of these genes in the metabolic complications associated with PsA.Conclusion:These findings help our understanding of the pathogenesis of PsA and advance epigenetic studies in regards to this disease and the cardiometabolic comorbidities associated. Funded by ISCIII (PI17/01316 and RIER RD16/0012/0015) co-funded with FEDER.Disclosure of Interests:Iván Arias de la Rosa: None declared, María Dolores López Montilla Speakers bureau: Celgene, Javier Rodríguez: None declared, Esteban Ballester: None declared, Carmen Torres-Granados: None declared, Carlos Perez-Sanchez: None declared, Maria del Carmen Abalos-Aguilera: None declared, Gómez García Ignacio: None declared, Desiree Ruiz: None declared, Alejandra M. Patiño-Trives: None declared, María Luque-Tévar: None declared, Eduardo Collantes-Estévez Grant/research support from: ROCHE and Pfizer., Speakers bureau: ROCHE, Lilly, Bristol and Celgene., Chary Lopez-Pedrera Grant/research support from: ROCHE and Pfizer., Alejandro Escudero Contreras Grant/research support from: ROCHE and Pfizer, Speakers bureau: ROCHE, Lilly, Bristol and Celgene., Nuria Barbarroja Puerto Grant/research support from: ROCHE and Pfizer., Speakers bureau: ROCHE and Celgene.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 2472-2472
Author(s):  
Rao Prabhala ◽  
Puneet Cheema ◽  
Masood A. Shammas ◽  
Weihua Song ◽  
Elizabeth Blanchard ◽  
...  

Abstract Thalidomide (Thal) and its immunomodulatory analog, Revlimid (Rev) have demonstrated anti-myeloma activity in phase II and III studies and part of their activity is immune-mediated. We have previously demonstrated co-stimulatory effects of Thal and Rev on T cells mediated via B7-CD28 activation pathway. To understand the molecular events involved in T cell co-stimulation, we investigated the effects of Thal and Rev on the genome-wide gene expression profile of T cells with or without anti-CD3 activation. Normal PBMC were incubated with Thal or Rev in the presence or absence of anti-CD3 antibodies (200ng/ml) for 3 or 24 hours at 37oC and total RNA was analyzed using U133 GeneChip (Affymetrix). Although Thal and Rev do not show significant effect on T cell proliferation without CD3 stimulation, we observed up-regulation (>2-folds) of 56 genes and down-regulation of 42 genes at 3 hours, and up-regulation of 41genes and down-regulation of 35 genes at 24 hours with Rev. Significant up-regulation of IFN-α (10-folds) was observed at 3 hours. Up-regulation of chemokine CXC5 (9 fold); IFN-β (5 fold), IL-7 (5 fold) and IL-2 (3 fold); and signaling genes like JK 3 (10 folds) and MAPKK5 (5 folds) was observed at 24 hours with Rev. Following anti-CD3 activation, Rev induced significant upregulation of 59 and 48 genes and down-regulation of 126 and 61 genes at 3 and 24 hours respectively. These include down-regulation of Th2 cytokine genes IL-5(5 folds) and TGF-β (2 folds), and apoptotsis related genes, TNFSF12 (4 folds) and TNFRSF 6b (4 folds). Genes involved in B7-CD28 activation pathway and up-regulated include CXC 5 (9 folds), IL-8 (5 folds) and IL-3 (4 folds). Interestingly, p52, which is a key molecule in CD28 signaling, was elevated 18 folds. Additionally less than 2 fold increase was observed in other CD28 signaling genes like IKK, Vov, and RelA (p65). Rev also down-regulated, at 24 hours, the expression of IL-10 (6 folds), IL-17 (3 folds) and TGF-β (3 folds) which allows sustained co-stimulation. Similar changes with lesser magnitude were observed with Thal. These results provide insight into early molecular changes induced by Thal and Rev that is important for co-stimulation and suggest new molecular targets to generate effective immune responses. Moreover, these observations facilitate the pre-clinical rationale for the use of these immunomodulatory compounds to improve clinical outcome in myeloma.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 526-526
Author(s):  
Junfeng Luo ◽  
Justin Choi ◽  
Lirong Pei ◽  
Farrukh Awan ◽  
Eun-Joon Lee ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 526 Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a biologically and clinically heterogeneous disease. The somatic hypermutation status of the immunoglobulin heavy chain variable (IGHV) genes has been identified as one of the most robust prognostic markers in CLL. Patients with unmutated IGHV status (U-CLL) typically experience an inferior outcome compared to those whose clones express mutated IGHV genes (M-CLL). We conducted a genome-wide DNA methylation analysis in CD19+ B-cells from a group of 43 CLL patients using reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (RRBS). Using base-pair resolution methylation sequencing, 2323 differentially methylated regions between CLL and normal B cells (CLL-specific DMRs) and 569 between M-CLL and U-CLL samples (IGHV-specific DMRs) were identified in the CLL genomes. The IGHV-specific DMRs are mostly unique when compared to the CLL-specific DMRs. Less than 10% of the IGHV-specific DMRs are located in promoter regions; however, more than half of these overlap with known DNase I hypersensitive sites, enhancer regions marked by histone modification (H3K4Me1 and H3K27Ac), and transcription factor binding sites in the ENCODE datasets, which indicates that these DMRs contain regulatory sequences. Distinctive DNA methylation patterns were observed in M-CLL and U-CLL samples. Overall, U-CLL was found to contain 50% more hypermethylated regions than M-CLL samples. The hypermethylated loci observed in the U-CLL samples also appear to be hypermethylated in normal naïve B cells as compared memory B cells, suggesting that M-CLL and U-CLL differ in differentiation status corresponding to normal B cell differentiation stages. RNA-seq analysis performed using matched samples (n=34), in which both DNA methylation and gene expression data were available, demonstrated excellent correlation between DNA methylation and gene expression. Several genes whose expression status was previously shown to be associated with CLL prognosis such as ZAP70, CRY1, LDOC1, SEPT10, LAG3, and LPL were differentially methylated in the promoter regions between M-CLL and U-CLL samples indicating that DNA methylation plays an important role in defining the gene expression patterns of these prognostic genes. We further validated 9 genes with IGHV-specific DMRs in the promoter regions using bisulfite pyrosequencing, and the results demonstrated excellent correlation between differential methylation and IGHV mutation status. These novel differentially methylated genes could be developed into biomarkers for CLL prognosis. In addition, DNA hypomethylation was observed in a significant number of genes involved in lymphocyte activation such as PDCD1, NFATc1, and CD5. DNA hypomethylation was observed in the proximal promoter and far up-stream enhancer regions of CD5, an important cell surface marker that uniquely identifies CLL. Overall, the DNA methylation landscape in CLL patients indicates that CLL B cells possess an active B-cell phenotype; at the same time, U-CLL and M-CLL are faithfully committed to their lineage resembling either naïve or memory B cells. In summary, this comprehensive DNA methylation analysis has identified a large number of novel epigenetic changes in CLL patients. The results from this study will further advance our understanding of the epigenetic contribution to molecular subtypes in CLL. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2016 ◽  
Vol 75 (11) ◽  
pp. 2029-2036 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliana Imgenberg-Kreuz ◽  
Johanna K Sandling ◽  
Jonas Carlsson Almlöf ◽  
Jessica Nordlund ◽  
Linnea Signér ◽  
...  

ObjectivesIncreasing evidence suggests an epigenetic contribution to the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases, including primary Sjögren's Syndrome (pSS). The aim of this study was to investigate the role of DNA methylation in pSS by analysing multiple tissues from patients and controls.MethodsGenome-wide DNA methylation profiles were generated using HumanMethylation450K BeadChips for whole blood, CD19+ B cells and minor salivary gland biopsies. Gene expression was analysed in CD19+ B cells by RNA-sequencing. Analysis of genetic regulatory effects on DNA methylation at known pSS risk loci was performed.ResultsWe identified prominent hypomethylation of interferon (IFN)-regulated genes in whole blood and CD19+ B cells, including at the genes MX1, IFI44L and PARP9, replicating previous reports in pSS, as well as identifying a large number of novel associations. Enrichment for genomic overlap with histone marks for enhancer and promoter regions was observed. We showed for the first time that hypomethylation of IFN-regulated genes in pSS B cells was associated with their increased expression. In minor salivary gland biopsies we observed hypomethylation of the IFN-induced gene OAS2. Pathway and disease analysis resulted in enrichment of antigen presentation, IFN signalling and lymphoproliferative disorders. Evidence for genetic control of methylation levels at known pSS risk loci was observed.ConclusionsOur study highlights the role of epigenetic regulation of IFN-induced genes in pSS where replication is needed for novel findings. The association with altered gene expression suggests a functional mechanism for differentially methylated CpG sites in pSS aetiology.


PLoS Genetics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. e1009199
Author(s):  
Christian Lundtoft ◽  
Pascal Pucholt ◽  
Juliana Imgenberg-Kreuz ◽  
Jonas Carlsson-Almlöf ◽  
Maija-Leena Eloranta ◽  
...  

Interferons (IFNs) are cytokines that are central to the host defence against viruses and other microorganisms. If not properly regulated, IFNs may contribute to the pathogenesis of inflammatory autoimmune, or infectious diseases. To identify genetic polymorphisms regulating the IFN system we performed an unbiased genome-wide protein-quantitative trait loci (pQTL) mapping of cell-type specific type I and type II IFN receptor levels and their responses in immune cells from 303 healthy individuals. Seven genome-wide significant (p < 5.0E-8) pQTLs were identified. Two independent SNPs that tagged the multiple sclerosis (MS)-protective HLA class I alleles A*02/A*68 and B*44, respectively, were associated with increased levels of IFNAR2 in B and T cells, with the most prominent effect in IgD–CD27+ memory B cells. The increased IFNAR2 levels in B cells were replicated in cells from an independent set of healthy individuals and in MS patients. Despite increased IFNAR2 levels, B and T cells carrying the MS-protective alleles displayed a reduced response to type I IFN stimulation. Expression and methylation-QTL analysis demonstrated increased mRNA expression of the pseudogene HLA-J in B cells carrying the MS-protective class I alleles, possibly driven via methylation-dependent transcriptional regulation. Together these data suggest that the MS-protective effects of HLA class I alleles are unrelated to their antigen-presenting function, and propose a previously unappreciated function of type I IFN signalling in B and T cells in MS immune-pathogenesis.


1983 ◽  
Vol 258 (17) ◽  
pp. 10805-10811 ◽  
Author(s):  
M L Johnson ◽  
J Levy ◽  
S C Supowit ◽  
L Y Yu-Lee ◽  
J M Rosen

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mette Soerensen ◽  
Dominika Marzena Hozakowska-Roszkowska ◽  
Marianne Nygaard ◽  
Martin J. Larsen ◽  
Veit Schwämmle ◽  
...  

Epigenomics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz Garcia-Ruiz ◽  
Manuel Castro de Moura ◽  
Gerard Muntané ◽  
Lourdes Martorell ◽  
Elena Bosch ◽  
...  

Aim: To investigate DDR1 methylation in the brains of bipolar disorder (BD) patients and its association with DDR1 mRNA levels and comethylation with myelin genes. Materials & methods: Genome-wide profiling of DNA methylation (Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip) corrected for glial composition and DDR1 gene expression analysis in the occipital cortices of individuals with BD (n = 15) and healthy controls (n = 15) were conducted. Results: DDR1 5-methylcytosine levels were increased and directly associated with DDR1b mRNA expression in the brains of BD patients. We also observed that DDR1 was comethylated with a group of myelin genes. Conclusion: DDR1 is hypermethylated in BD brain tissue and is associated with isoform expression. Additionally, DDR1 comethylation with myelin genes supports the role of this receptor in myelination.


2014 ◽  
Vol 34 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessilyn Dunn ◽  
Haiwei Qiu ◽  
Soyeon Kim ◽  
Daudi Jjingo ◽  
Ryan Hoffman ◽  
...  

Atherosclerosis preferentially occurs in arterial regions of disturbed blood flow (d-flow), which alters gene expression, endothelial function, and atherosclerosis. Here, we show that d-flow regulates genome-wide DNA methylation patterns in a DNA methyltransferase (DNMT)-dependent manner. We found that d-flow induced expression of DNMT1, but not DNMT3a or DNMT3b, in mouse arterial endothelium in vivo and in cultured endothelial cells by oscillatory shear (OS) compared to unidirectional laminar shear in vitro. The DNMT inhibitor 5-Aza-2’deoxycytidine (5Aza) or DNMT1 siRNA significantly reduced OS-induced endothelial inflammation. Moreover, 5Aza reduced lesion formation in two atherosclerosis models using ApoE-/- mice (western diet for 3 months and the partial carotid ligation model with western diet for 3 weeks). To identify the 5Aza mechanisms, we conducted two genome-wide studies: reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (RRBS) and transcript microarray using endothelial-enriched gDNA and RNA, respectively, obtained from the partially-ligated left common carotid artery (LCA exposed to d-flow) and the right contralateral control (RCA exposed to s-flow) of mice treated with 5Aza or vehicle. D-flow induced DNA hypermethylation in 421 gene promoters, which was significantly prevented by 5Aza in 335 genes. Systems biological analyses using the RRBS and the transcriptome data revealed 11 mechanosensitive genes whose promoters were hypermethylated by d-flow but rescued by 5Aza treatment. Of those, five genes contain hypermethylated cAMP-response-elements in their promoters, including the transcription factors HoxA5 and Klf3. Their methylation status could serve as a mechanosensitive master switch in endothelial gene expression. Our results demonstrate that d-flow controls epigenomic DNA methylation patterns in a DNMT-dependent manner, which in turn alters endothelial gene expression and induces atherosclerosis.


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