| Literature DB >> 27943079 |
Gillian I Rice1, Isabelle Melki2,3,4,5, Marie-Louise Frémond2,3,5, Tracy A Briggs1,6, Mathieu P Rodero2,3, Naoki Kitabayashi2,3, Anthony Oojageer1, Brigitte Bader-Meunier3,5,7, Alexandre Belot8,9, Christine Bodemer3,10, Pierre Quartier3,5, Yanick J Crow11,12,13,14.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Increased type I interferon is considered relevant to the pathology of a number of monogenic and complex disorders spanning pediatric rheumatology, neurology, and dermatology. However, no test exists in routine clinical practice to identify enhanced interferon signaling, thus limiting the ability to diagnose and monitor treatment of these diseases. Here, we set out to investigate the use of an assay measuring the expression of a panel of interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) in children affected by a range of inflammatory diseases. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A cohort study was conducted between 2011 and 2016 at the University of Manchester, UK, and the Institut Imagine, Paris, France. RNA PAXgene blood samples and clinical data were collected from controls and symptomatic patients with a genetically confirmed or clinically well-defined inflammatory phenotype. The expression of six ISGs was measured by quantitative polymerase chain reaction, and the median fold change was used to calculate an interferon score (IS) for each subject compared to a previously derived panel of 29 controls (where +2 SD of the control data, an IS of >2.466, is considered as abnormal). Results were correlated with genetic and clinical data.Entities:
Keywords: Interferon; autoinflammation; autoinflammatory disease; interferonopathy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27943079 PMCID: PMC5325846 DOI: 10.1007/s10875-016-0359-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.317
Fig. 1Flow chart showing inclusion/exclusion criteria for study participation. The number of measurements (samples) is given, together with the number of individuals/number of families below/in brackets. Treatment* refers to samples excluded (n = 93) because patients were on reverse transcriptase or JAK inhibitors
Summary data of median (and interquartile range, IQR) of interferon score in patients categorized by genotype/phenotype within each patient group
| Number of samples/patients | Number (percentage) with positive interferon scorea | Median (IQR) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Controls | 78/65 | 7 (8.97%) | 0.688 (0.427–1.196) |
| Group 1 patients combined | 455/265 | 412 (90.55%) | 10.73 (5.889–18.41) |
|
| 77/40 | 74 (96.10%) | 10.89 (5.859–19.79) |
|
| 11/5 | 11 (100%) | 8.303 (4.215–19.59) |
|
| 148/84 | 115 (77.70%) | 6.101 (2.744–10.84) |
|
| 115 | 7.731 (5.387–11.76) | |
|
| 16/13 | 16 (100%) | 9.104 (6.819–13.78) |
|
| 45/31 | 45 (100%) | 12.51 (9.215–16.53) |
|
| 56/34 | 52 (92.86%) | 16.16 (8.801–25.39) |
|
| 59/26 | 59 (100%) | 16.12 (11.15–22.03) |
|
| 17/12 | 14 (82.35%) | 21.43 (3.264–32.26) |
|
| 14/10 | 14 (100%) | 16.05 (9.541–26.20) |
|
| 4/3 | 4 (100%) | 16.86 (4.374–39.41) |
|
| 1/1 | 1 (100%) | 11.90 |
|
| 5/4 | 5 (100%) | 21.24 (13.22–31.77) |
|
| 2/2 | 2 (100%) | 24.67 (22.04–27.31) |
| Parents + siblings of group 1 patients | 89/76 | 19 (21.35%) | 0.862 (0.493–1.942) |
| Group 2 patients combined | 30/17 | 23 (76.67%) | 5.728 (2.604–9.805) |
|
| 11/5 | 9 (81.82%) | 5.653 (3.349–7.053) |
|
| 6/5 | 5 (83.33%) | 4.288 (2.512–6.338) |
|
| 6/2 | 5 (83.33%) | 17.06 (4.582–22.29) |
|
| 4/3 | 2 (50%) | 4.048 (1.324–7.702) |
|
| 3/2 | 2 (66.67%) | 10.83 (0.374–11.00) |
| Group 3 patients combined | 340/207 | 235 (69.12%) | |
| JSLE | 78/55 | 64 (82.05%) | 10.60 (3.986–17.27) |
| JDM | 101/59 | 76 (75.25%) | 9.019 (2.507–21.73) |
| Molecularly undefined interferonopathy | 72/24 | 67 (93.06%) | 9.385 (6.675–13.98) |
| sJIA | 21/19 | 6 (28.57%) | 0.676 (0.496–6.421) |
| pJIA | 10/9 | 0 (0%) | 0.800 (0.387–1.074) |
| Autoinflammatory | 58/41 | 22 (37.93%) | 1.252 (0.590–4.064) |
JSLE juvenile systemic lupus erythematosus, JDM juvenile DM, sJIA systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), pJIA non-systemic JIA
aPositive interferon score ≥2.466
Fig. 2Interferon score plotted for each sample according to genotype/phenotype. a 455 group 1 patient samples. b 30 group 2 patient samples. c 340 group 3 patient samples. Black horizontal lines represent the median for each patient group. Interferon scores calculated from the median fold change in RQ (relative quantification) values of a panel of six interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs). Blue dots represent an interferon score of less than 2.466. Red dots represent an interferon score of greater than 2.466. Magenta dots represent patients treated with IL1 blockade. Analyzed by one-way ANOVA with Dunnett’s multiple comparison test
Fig. 3Median fold expression of six interferon-stimulated genes according to genotype. Median relative quantification (RQ) value for each of six interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) measured in a 74 TREX1, 11 RNASEH2A, 115 RNASEH2B, 16 RNASEH2C, 45 SAMHD1, 52 ADAR1, and 59 IFIH1 samples with a positive (>2.466) interferon score; b 14 ACP5, 14 TMEM173, four C1QA, and five ISG15 samples with a positive (>2.466) interferon score; c 101 JDM, 21 sJIA, 58 autoinflammatory, 72 molecularly undefined interferonopathy, 78 JSLE, and ten pJIA. RQ is equal to 2−∆∆Ct, i.e., the normalized fold change relative to a control
Fig. 4Interferon scores in patients where four or more serial samples were recorded. Data shown are interferon scores plotted against time (years) since first sampling. Interferon scores are calculated from the median fold change in relative quantification (RQ) values for a panel of six interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs). The blue dashed line represents the boundary of a positive/negative score (2.466). The number of serial samples for each patient is shown in brackets in the legend