BioMedInformatics (May 2024)

Bioinformatics-Based Identification of Human B-Cell Receptor (BCR) Stimulation-Associated Genes and Putative Promoters

  • Ethan Deitcher,
  • Kirk Trisler,
  • Branden S. Moriarity,
  • Caleb J. Bostwick,
  • Fleur A. D. Leenen,
  • Steven R. Deitcher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedinformatics4020076
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 1384 – 1395

Abstract

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Genome engineered B-cells are being developed for chronic, systemic in vivo protein replacement therapies and for localized, tumor cell-actuated anticancer therapeutics. For continuous systemic engineered protein production, expression may be driven by constitutively active promoters. For actuated payload delivery, B-cell conditional expression could be based on transgene alternate splicing or heterologous promotors activated after engineered B-cell receptor (BCR) stimulation. This study used a bioinformatics-based approach to identify putative BCR-stimulated gene promoters. Gene expression data at four timepoints (60, 90, 210, and 390 min) following in vitro BCR stimulation using an anti-IgM antibody in B-cells from six healthy donors were analyzed using R (4.2.2). Differentially upregulated genes were stringently defined as those with adjusted p-value 2FoldChange > 1.5. The most upregulated and statistically significant genes were further analyzed to find those with the lowest unstimulated B-cell expression. Of the 46 significantly upregulated genes at 390 min post-BCR stimulation, 6 had average unstimulated expression below the median unstimulated expression at 390 min for all 54,675 gene probes. This bioinformatics-based identification of 6 relatively quiescent genes at baseline that are upregulated by BCR-stimulation (“on-switch”) provides a set of promising promotors for inclusion in future transgene designs and engineered B-cell therapeutics development.

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