PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Concordance between gene expression in peripheral whole blood and colonic tissue in children with inflammatory bowel disease.

  • Nathan P Palmer,
  • Jocelyn A Silvester,
  • Jessica J Lee,
  • Andrew L Beam,
  • Inbar Fried,
  • Vladimir I Valtchinov,
  • Fedik Rahimov,
  • Sek Won Kong,
  • Saum Ghodoussipour,
  • Helen C Hood,
  • Athos Bousvaros,
  • Richard J Grand,
  • Louis M Kunkel,
  • Isaac S Kohane

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222952
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
p. e0222952

Abstract

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BackgroundPresenting features of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are non-specific. We hypothesized that mRNA profiles could (1) identify genes and pathways involved in disease pathogenesis; (2) identify a molecular signature that differentiates IBD from other conditions; (3) provide insight into systemic and colon-specific dysregulation through study of the concordance of the gene expression.MethodsChildren (8-18 years) were prospectively recruited at the time of diagnostic colonoscopy for possible IBD. We used transcriptome-wide mRNA profiling to study gene expression in colon biopsies and paired whole blood samples. Using blood mRNA measurements, we fit a regression model for disease state prediction that was validated in an independent test set of adult subjects (GSE3365).ResultsNinety-eight children were recruited [39 Crohn's disease, 18 ulcerative colitis, 2 IBDU, 39 non-IBD]. There were 1,118 significantly differentially (IBD vs non-IBD) expressed genes in colon tissue, and 880 in blood. The direction of relative change in expression was concordant for 106/112 genes differentially expressed in both tissue types. The regression model from the blood mRNA measurements distinguished IBD vs non-IBD disease status in the independent test set with 80% accuracy using only 6 genes. The overlap of 5 immune and metabolic pathways in the two tissue types was significant (pConclusionsBlood and colon tissue from patients with IBD share a common transcriptional profile dominated by immune and metabolic pathways. Our results suggest that peripheral blood expression levels of as few as 6 genes (IL7R, UBB, TXNIP, S100A8, ALAS2, and SLC2A3) may distinguish patients with IBD from non-IBD.