| Literature DB >> 19741051 |
M Comabella1, J D Lünemann, J Río, A Sánchez, C López, E Julià, M Fernández, L Nonell, M Camiña-Tato, F Deisenhammer, E Caballero, M T Tortola, M Prinz, X Montalban, R Martin.
Abstract
The effect of interferon-beta in multiple sclerosis is modest and many patients do not respond to treatment. To date, no single biomarker reliably correlates with responsiveness to interferon-beta in multiple sclerosis. In the present study, genome-wide expression profiling was performed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 47 multiple sclerosis patients treated with interferon-beta for a minimum of 2 years and classified as responders and non-responders based on clinical criteria. A validation cohort of 30 multiple sclerosis patients was included in the study to replicate gene-expression findings. Before treatment, interferon-beta responders and non-responders were characterized by differential expression of type I interferon-induced genes with overexpression of the type interferon-induced genes in non-responders. Upon treatment the expression of these genes remained unaltered in non-responders, but was strongly upregulated in responders. Functional experiments showed a selective increase in phosphorylated STAT1 levels and interferon receptor 1 expression in monocytes of non-responders at baseline. When dissecting this type I interferon signature further, interferon-beta non-responders were characterized by increased monocyte type I interferon secretion upon innate immune stimuli via toll-like receptor 4, by increased endogenous production of type I interferon, and by an elevated activation status of myeloid dendritic cells. These findings indicate that perturbations of the type I interferon signalling pathway in monocytes are related to lack of response to interferon-beta, and type I interferon-regulated genes may be used as response markers in interferon-beta treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19741051 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awp228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501