| Literature DB >> 28179442 |
Chih-Hsi Scott Kuo1,2,3, Stelios Pavlidis4, Matthew Loza4, Fred Baribaud4, Anthony Rowe4, Iaonnis Pandis3, Ana Sousa5, Julie Corfield6,7, Ratko Djukanovic8, Rene Lutter9, Peter J Sterk9, Charles Auffray8,10, Yike Guo3, Ian M Adcock1,2,11, Kian Fan Chung12,2,11.
Abstract
Asthma is characterised by heterogeneous clinical phenotypes. Our objective was to determine molecular phenotypes of asthma by analysing sputum cell transcriptomics from 104 moderate-to-severe asthmatic subjects and 16 nonasthmatic subjects.After filtering on the differentially expressed genes between eosinophil- and noneosinophil-associated sputum inflammation, we used unbiased hierarchical clustering on 508 differentially expressed genes and gene set variation analysis of specific gene sets.We defined three transcriptome-associated clusters (TACs): TAC1 (characterised by immune receptors IL33R, CCR3 and TSLPR), TAC2 (characterised by interferon-, tumour necrosis factor-α- and inflammasome-associated genes) and TAC3 (characterised by genes of metabolic pathways, ubiquitination and mitochondrial function). TAC1 showed the highest enrichment of gene signatures for interleukin-13/T-helper cell type 2 (Th2) and innate lymphoid cell type 2. TAC1 had the highest sputum eosinophilia and exhaled nitric oxide fraction, and was restricted to severe asthma with oral corticosteroid dependency, frequent exacerbations and severe airflow obstruction. TAC2 showed the highest sputum neutrophilia, serum C-reactive protein levels and prevalence of eczema. TAC3 had normal to moderately high sputum eosinophils and better preserved forced expiratory volume in 1 s. Gene-protein coexpression networks from TAC1 and TAC2 extended this molecular classification.We defined one Th2-high eosinophilic phenotype TAC1, and two non-Th2 phenotypes TAC2 and TAC3, characterised by inflammasome-associated and metabolic/mitochondrial pathways, respectively.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28179442 DOI: 10.1183/13993003.02135-2016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir J ISSN: 0903-1936 Impact factor: 16.671