| Literature DB >> 19555476 |
John W Gow1, Suzanne Hagan, Pawel Herzyk, Celia Cannon, Peter O Behan, Abhijit Chaudhuri.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: At present, there are no clinically reliable disease markers for chronic fatigue syndrome. DNA chip microarray technology provides a method for examining the differential expression of mRNA from a large number of genes. Our hypothesis was that a gene expression signature, generated by microarray assays, could help identify genes which are dysregulated in patients with post-infectious CFS and so help identify biomarkers for the condition.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19555476 PMCID: PMC2716361 DOI: 10.1186/1755-8794-2-38
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genomics ISSN: 1755-8794 Impact factor: 3.063
Top 10 up-regulated genes (+) and top 3 down-regulated genes (-) in post-infectious CFS patients
| Lactotransferrin (LTF) | +7.2 | NM_002343 |
| Defensin α1 (DEFA1) | +6.0 | NM_004084 |
| Charcot-Leyden Crystal protein (CLC) | +5.6 | NM_001828 |
| Haemaglobin, gamma A (HBG1) | +4.8 | NM_000559 |
| CEACAM8 | +4.1 | NM_001816 |
| Integrin α2B (ITGA2B) | +4.1 | NM_000419 |
| Haemaglobin, gamma G (HBG2) | +3.9 | NM_000184 |
| Defensin α4 (DEFA4), corticostatin | +3.9 | NM_001925 |
| Integrin β3 (ITGB3), CD61 | +3.8 | NM_000212 |
| Chemokine (C-X-C) receptor 4 (CXCR4) | +3.6 | NM_001008540 |
| RPS26 | -4.2 | NM_001029 |
| ZNF294 | -3.8 | AK023499 |
| HLA-DQA1 | -3.5 | NM_022122 |
Figure 1High-level functional categories involved in this IPA analysis. Y-axis displays -(log) significance. A) Top 10 biofunctions for CFS patients and B) total biofunctions for CFS patients. Taller bars are more significant than shorter bars. Functions are listed from most significant to least and the horizontal line denotes the cut-off for significance (p < 0.05).
Figure 2Differentially expressed gene networks. Networks showing differentially up-regulated genes (red) and down-regulated genes (green) in post-infectious CFS patients, whereby A) includes lactotransferrin (LTF, up-regulated 7.2-fold), B) includes CXCR4 (up-regulated 3.6-fold) and C) includes the integrins α2B and β3 (up-regulated 4.1 and 3.8-fold, respectively) and defensin-α1 (up-regulated 6-fold).
Three altered bio-systems in CFS
| Prostaglandin Synthase: COX-1 and 2, haemoglobin gamma A and gamma G |
| Glutathion-s-transferase |
| Annexin -A3, -A5, Serine/threonine kinase 17b, Histones 1&2, Protein S (alpha), Serum deprivation response (Phosphatidylserine binding protein) |
| DAF (CD55) & CD46 |
| Antigen processing via MHC class II (MHC II DP α1 and DR α) |
| IL-12, IL-13 & IL-6 biosynthesis |
| Natural Killer cell receptors (KIR) |
| TCR complex (T-cell receptors α, β, δ, γ) |
| NO production (up-regulation of arginase I & II) |
| Flavohaemoprotein B5 |
Figure 3RT-PCR assay and western blot analysis. Detection of over-expression of defensin-α1 in CFS patients compared to normal healthy controls. A) 25 μl of each PCR product was electrophoresed through a 2.5% agarose gel, ethidium bromide stained and UV visualised. Lanes: L: DNA size ladder; 1–3: Healthy controls; 4–6: Patients with CFS. B) Western blot analysis. Each lane contained 2 × 105 PBMC and equivalent protein loading of all samples was confirmed by coomassie blue staining. Left-hand side of blot: 10 CFS patients; right-hand side of blot: 10 healthy controls.
Commonly overexpressed CFS genes between current study and previous microarray studies
| Dynactin1 | ||||
| ARF1 | ||||
| CEACAM family | ||||
| Defensin family | ||||
| CXCR4 | ||||
| EGR1 | ||||
| PRKAR1A |