npj Genomic Medicine (Feb 2017)

Relation between NOD2 genotype and changes in innate signaling in Crohn’s disease on mRNA and miRNA levels

  • Yun Chen,
  • Mohammad Salem,
  • Mette Boyd,
  • Jette Bornholdt,
  • Yuan Li,
  • Mehmet Coskun,
  • Jakob Benedict Seidelin,
  • Albin Sandelin,
  • Ole Haagen Nielsen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-016-0001-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Crohn’s disease: Genetics impacts molecular regulation of innate immunity on miRNA, but not gene level The genetics of people with Crohn’s disease affects the molecular drivers of their dysregulated immune responses. Some individuals with Crohn’s harbor mutations in the NOD2 gene, which encodes a pathogen recognition receptor that binds to a molecule called muramyl dipeptide (MDP). To better understand how alternations in NOD2 can lead to increased susceptibility to gut inflammation, Yun Chen, Mohammad Salem and colleagues from the University of Copenhagen and Herlev Hospital, Denmark, analyzed the expression patterns of both genes and small, regulatory microRNAs in blood cells from healthy controls and from Crohn’s patients with and without NOD2 mutations. They exposed the cells to MDP, and saw that although gene acticity changed dramatically as a response, there was little difference between subjects, regardless of genetics. Conversely, microRNA expression showed genotype-specific differences that weren not impacted by MDP treatment. The findings underscore the importance of microRNAs in Crohn’s disease.