Pharmaceutics (Jun 2024)

Single-Cell Transcriptomic and Targeted Genomic Profiling Adjusted for Inflammation and Therapy Bias Reveal <i>CRTAM</i> and <i>PLCB1</i> as Novel Hub Genes for Anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha Therapy Response in Crohn’s Disease

  • Mario Gorenjak,
  • Boris Gole,
  • Larisa Goričan,
  • Gregor Jezernik,
  • Uršula Prosenc Zmrzljak,
  • Cvetka Pernat,
  • Pavel Skok,
  • Uroš Potočnik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics16060835
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. 835

Abstract

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Background: The lack of reliable biomarkers in response to anti-TNFα biologicals hinders personalized therapy for Crohn’s disease (CD) patients. The motivation behind our study is to shift the paradigm of anti-TNFα biomarker discovery toward specific immune cell sub-populations using single-cell RNA sequencing and an innovative approach designed to uncover PBMCs gene expression signals, which may be masked due to the treatment or ongoing inflammation; Methods: The single-cell RNA sequencing was performed on PBMC samples from CD patients either naïve to biological therapy, in remission while on adalimumab, or while on ustekinumab but previously non-responsive to adalimumab. Sieves for stringent downstream gene selection consisted of gene ontology and independent cohort genomic profiling. Replication and meta-analyses were performed using publicly available raw RNA sequencing files of sorted immune cells and an association analysis summary. Machine learning, Mendelian randomization, and oligogenic risk score methods were deployed to validate DEGs highly relevant to anti-TNFα therapy response; Results: This study found PLCB1 in CD4+ T cells and CRTAM in double-negative T cells, which met the stringent statistical thresholds throughout the analyses. An additional assessment proved causal inference of both genes in response to anti-TNFα therapy; Conclusions: This study, jointly with an innovative design, uncovered novel candidate genes in the anti-TNFα response landscape of CD, potentially obscured by therapy or inflammation.

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