Molecular Systems Biology (Jul 2012)

Systems analysis of eleven rodent disease models reveals an inflammatome signature and key drivers

  • I‐Ming Wang,
  • Bin Zhang,
  • Xia Yang,
  • Jun Zhu,
  • Serguei Stepaniants,
  • Chunsheng Zhang,
  • Qingying Meng,
  • Mette Peters,
  • Yudong He,
  • Chester Ni,
  • Deborah Slipetz,
  • Michael A Crackower,
  • Hani Houshyar,
  • Christopher M Tan,
  • Ernest Asante‐Appiah,
  • Gary O'Neill,
  • Mingjuan Jane Luo,
  • Rolf Thieringer,
  • Jeffrey Yuan,
  • Chi‐Sung Chiu,
  • Pek Yee Lum,
  • John Lamb,
  • Yves Boie,
  • Hilary A Wilkinson,
  • Eric E Schadt,
  • Hongyue Dai,
  • Christopher Roberts

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/msb.2012.24
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Common inflammatome gene signatures as well as disease‐specific signatures were identified by analyzing 12 expression profiling data sets derived from 9 different tissues isolated from 11 rodent inflammatory disease models. The inflammatome signature significantly overlaps with known drug targets and co‐expressed gene modules linked to metabolic disorders and cancer. A large proportion of genes in this signature are tightly connected in tissue‐specific Bayesian networks (BNs) built from multiple independent mouse and human cohorts. Both the inflammatome signature and the corresponding consensus BNs are highly enriched for immune response‐related genes supported as causal for adiposity, adipokine, diabetes, aortic lesion, bone, muscle, and cholesterol traits, suggesting the causal nature of the inflammatome for a variety of diseases. Integration of this inflammatome signature with the BNs uncovered 151 key drivers that appeared to be more biologically important than the non‐drivers in terms of their impact on disease phenotypes. The identification of this inflammatome signature, its network architecture, and key drivers not only highlights the shared etiology but also pinpoints potential targets for intervention of various common diseases.

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