| Literature DB >> 33007857 |
Geneviève Rioux1,2, Zainab Ridha1, Mélissa Simard1,2, Florence Turgeon1,2, Sylvain L Guérin1,3,4, Roxane Pouliot1,2.
Abstract
Psoriasis is an immune-mediated inflammatory skin disease with a complex etiology involving environmental and genetic factors. A better insight into related genomic alteration helps design precise therapies leading to better treatment outcome. Gene expression in psoriasis can provide relevant information about the altered expression of mRNA transcripts, thus giving new insights into the disease onset. Techniques for transcriptome analyses, such as microarray and RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), are relevant tools for the discovery of new biomarkers as well as new therapeutic targets. This review summarizes the findings related to the contribution of keratinocytes in the pathogenesis of psoriasis by an in-depth review of studies that have examined psoriatic transcriptomes in the past years. It also provides valuable information on reconstructed 3D psoriatic skin models using cells isolated from psoriatic patients for transcriptomic studies.Entities:
Keywords: RNA-seq; gene expression; keratinocytes; microarray; psoriasis; skin; transcriptome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33007857 PMCID: PMC7600703 DOI: 10.3390/genes11101155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Psoriasis transcriptomic analyses.
| Year | References | Samples | Key Message | Methodology and Validation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | Oestreicher et al. [ | 24 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | This first genome-wide analysis following a pharmacological intervention has shown that treatment can influence the effect on gene expression. Recombinant human IL-11 treatment resulted in increased expression of genes such as | Microarray (HuGeneFL, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) |
| 2001 | Bowcock et al. [ | 15 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | Hierarchical clustering analyses showed a strong difference in gene expression between lesional and non-lesional samples, particularly genes expressed by inflammatory cells. These variances are independent of the | Microarray (HG-U95A, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) |
| 2003 | Nomura et al. [ | Skin biopsies from 7 patients with psoriasis and 6 patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) | Study showing for the first time the distinctive pattern of gene expression that characterizes AD versus psoriatic skin lesion. The 18 genes whose expression is increased in AD skin, including the CC chemokines | Microarray (HG-U95Av2, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) |
| 2003 | Zhou et al. [ | Psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | Identification of two new genes in the IL-1 family genes products that are deregulated in psoriatic lesions, namely | Microarray (HG-U95A-E, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) and |
| 2005 | Kulski et al. [ | 4 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | Gene expression profiling of Japanese psoriatic skin identified up-regulated genes involved in atypical epidermal cellular organization and differentiation, such as | Microarray (HG-U95Av2, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) |
| 2007 | Mee et al. [ | 6 psoriatic skin biopsies and healthy keratinocytes culture treated with cytokines | A significant correlation between upregulated transcripts in psoriatic skin lesions and the ones from IL-1-induced keratinocytes in vitro suggests a dominant innate immune response in the inflammatory environment of psoriatic lesions rather than an adaptive immune response. | Microarray (HuGeneFL and HG-U133A, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) |
| 2007 | Reischl et al. [ | 20 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | Increased expression of | Microarray (HG-U133A, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) and |
| 2008 | Yao et al. [ | 26 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | Type I IFNs as well as | Microarray (HG-U133 Plus 2.0, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) and |
| 2009 | Gudjonsson et al. [ | 58 psoriatic skin biopsies | Non-lesional skin could exist in a “pre-psoriatic” state. The decrease in the activity of three transcription factors, namely | Microarray (HG-U133 Plus 2.0, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) and |
| 2010 | Gudjonsson et al. [ | 58 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | A large-scale study identifying more than 600 previously unreported transcripts. The comparison of this study with the cytokine-stimulated keratinocytes transcriptomes showed moderate overlap with the psoriatic transcriptome, without however representing more than 5.6% of the complete psoriatic transcriptome. | Microarray (HG-U133 Plus 2.0, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) and |
| 2011 | Joyce et al. [ | Psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | Identification of a variety of new microRNAs by RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq). Of interest are an uncharacterized keratinocyte-derived miRNA, miR-135b, as well as an epidermal infiltration of the specific hematopoietic miRNA, miR-142-3p, in psoriatic lesions. The functions of these newly identified miRNAs are consistent with the inflammatory and hyperproliferative features of psoriasis. | Illumina (GAIIx, Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) and |
| 2012 | Suarez-Farinas et al. [ | 85 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | A study providing a complex molecular definition of moderate-to-severe psoriasis. Ingenuity pathway analysis identified activated transcription factors, such as | Microarray (HG-U133 Plus 2.0, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) and |
| 2012 | Jabbari et al. [ | Psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | The comparison of DEGs obtained from this study carried out by RNA-seq with those which used microarray technologies revealed a substantial number of previously unrecognized DEGs in psoriatic skin. The data obtained supported the importance of the synergy of the combined action of IL-17 and TNF-α in the pathogenesis of psoriasis. | RNA-seq (GAIIx, Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) |
| 2014 | Li et al. [ | 92 psoriatic skin biopsies | RNA-seq has put forward the involvement of transcripts with low expression levels which could not be identified by microarray studies by revealing gene coexpression networks illuminating processes involving keratinocytes, myeloid cells and T cells. | RNA-seq (GAII, Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) and microarray (HG-U133 Plus 2.0, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) |
| 2016 | Ahn et al. [ | 18 psoriatic skin biopsies (pre- and post-treatment with adalimumab) | Treatment with a TNF-α inhibitor, such as adalimumab, promotes normalization of disturbed pathways of psoriasis. The top enriched pathways after biological treatment are the regulation of leukocyte mediated cytotoxicity, regulation of cell killing and leukocyte activation. This study also highlights several roles for long non-coding RNAs. | RNA-seq (HiSeq 2000, Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) |
| 2016 | Swindell et al. [ | Psoriatic skin biopsies (performed using reads from prior studies) | The psoriasis specificity index developed revealed that psoriasis specific DEGs are mainly expressed by keratinocytes. Moreover, the activation of the IL-17A pathway appears to be a unique characteristic of psoriasis lesions and an inducer of DEGs. | RNA-seq meta-analysis (GSE41745, GSE54456/GSE63979 and GSE66511) |
| 2017 | Swindell et al. [ | Psoriatic keratinocyte monolayer culture compared to 4 skin biopsies from the same patients (lesional and non-lesional) | Identification of a decrease in the expression of early and late differentiation markers ( | RNA-seq (TruSeq mRNA Sample Prep v2 kit, Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) |
| 2018 | Ahn et al. [ | Biopsies from scalp (8), palmoplantar (2) and conventional (8) plaque psoriasis | RNA-seq analysis identifies a core set of DEGs common to the scalp, palmoplantar and conventional psoriasis, including genes involved in the activation and proliferation of keratinocytes, such as | RNA-seq (HiSeq, Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) |
| 2018 | Cheng et al. [ | 9 normal and 3 psoriatic epidermis manually separated from the dermis | Characterization of epidermal cell state according to three anatomical sites (scalp, trunk, and foreskin) as well as the psoriatic epidermis using single-cell RNA-seq revealed a discrete set of specialized keratinocytes that exhibit a distinct composition at different anatomic sites. | Single-cell RNA sequencing (HiSeq 2500, HiSeq 4000 or NovaSeq 6000, Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) |
| 2018 | Nattkemper et al. [ | 25 psoriatic skin biopsies | Identification of a gene signature associated with itching is described as “itchscriptome”. These genes are expressed by skin cells, immune cells, and nerves. Their products encode mediators and receptors associated with all aspects of the transmission of itching at the peripheral level. | RNA-seq (NextSeq, Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) |
| 2018 | Qiao et al. [ | 13 psoriatic skin biopsies | Results shed light on the effect of deregulation of circRNA expression and its potential biological functions in regulating immunity, inflammation, and proliferation of psoriasis. The aberrant expression of has_circ_0061012, a circRNA with five miRNA binding sites, may be involved in psoriasis and may be a potential biomarker. | Microarray (human ceRNA array V1.0 4x180K, Shanghai Biotechnology Corporation, Shangai, China) and |
| 2019 | Devos et al. [ | 9 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional, dermis and epidermis) | Microarray (MDS Analytical Technologies, Sunnyvale, CA, USA) | |
| 2019 | Pascali et al. [ | Keratinocytes enriched from 9 psoriatic skin biopsies (lesional and non-lesional) | Gene set enrichment analysis highlighted the dominance of an IL-22/IL-17A signature in psoriatic keratinocytes transcriptome. MetaCore analysis of DEGs revealed significantly enriched sites for multiple transcription factors. Among these, transcription factors still poorly characterized in the context of psoriasis have been identified, namely | Microarray (HTA 2.0, Affymetrix Inc, Santa Clara, CA, USA) and |
DEG, differentially expressed genes, the bold highlights studies that confirmed their gene profiling data.
Most up- and down-regulated genes between healthy and lesional psoriatic skin.
| Methodology | Top Upregulated Genes | Top Downregulated Genes | |
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| Bowcock et al. [ | Microarray (Affymetrix) |
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| Kulski et al. [ | Microarray (Affymetrix) |
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| Mee et al. [ | Microarray (Affymetrix) |
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| Gudjonsson et al. [ | Microarray (Affymetrix) |
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| Gudjonsson et al. [ | Microarray (Affymetrix) |
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| Li et al. [ | RNA-seq (Illumina) |
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| Ahn et al. [ | RNA-seq (Illumina) |
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| Pasquali et al. [ | Microarray (Affymetrix) |
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Genes identified in red appeared in two or more studies.