Smith Philip J, Levine Adam P, Dunne Jenny, Guilhamon Paul, Turmaine Mark, Sewell Gavin W, OʼShea Nuala R, Vega Roser, Paterson Jennifer C, Oukrif Dahmane, Beck Stephan, Bloom Stuart L, Novelli Marco, Rodriguez-Justo Manuel, Smith Andrew M, Segal Anthony W
*Centre for Molecular Medicine, Division of Medicine, University College London, London, United Kingdom; †Department of Gastroenterology, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom; ‡Medical Genomics, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, United Kingdom; §Division of Bioscience, University College London, London, United Kingdom; ‖Research Pathology and Advanced Diagnostics, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, United Kingdom; and ¶Microbial Diseases, Eastman Dental Institute, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2014 Oct;20(10):1802-12. doi: 10.1097/MIB.0000000000000169.
Mucosal abnormalities are potentially important in the primary pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis (UC). We investigated the mucosal transcriptomic expression profiles of biopsies from patients with UC and healthy controls, taken from macroscopically noninflamed tissue from the terminal ileum and 3 colonic locations with the objective of identifying abnormal molecules that might be involved in disease development.
Whole-genome transcriptional analysis was performed on intestinal biopsies taken from 24 patients with UC, 26 healthy controls, and 14 patients with Crohn's disease. Differential gene expression analysis was performed at each tissue location separately, and results were then meta-analyzed. Significantly, differentially expressed genes were validated using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. The location of gene expression within the colon was determined using immunohistochemistry, subcellular fractionation, electron and confocal microscopy. DNA methylation was quantified by pyrosequencing.
Only 4 probes were abnormally expressed throughout the colon in patients with UC with Bone morphogenetic protein/Retinoic acid Inducible Neural-specific 3 (BRINP3) being the most significantly underexpressed. Attenuated expression of BRINP3 in UC was independent of current inflammation, unrelated to phenotype or treatment, and remained low at rebiopsy an average of 22 months later. BRINP3 is localized to the brush border of the colonic epithelium and expression is influenced by DNA methylation within its promoter.
Genome-wide expression analysis of noninflamed mucosal biopsies from patients with UC identified BRINP3 as significantly underexpressed throughout the colon in a large subset of patients with UC. Low levels of this gene could predispose or contribute to the maintenance of the characteristic mucosal inflammation seen in this condition.
黏膜异常在溃疡性结肠炎(UC)的原发性发病机制中可能具有重要意义。我们研究了UC患者和健康对照者活检组织的黏膜转录组表达谱,这些活检组织取自回肠末端和3个结肠部位的宏观非炎症组织,目的是识别可能参与疾病发展的异常分子。
对24例UC患者、26例健康对照者和14例克罗恩病患者的肠道活检组织进行全基因组转录分析。在每个组织部位分别进行差异基因表达分析,然后对结果进行荟萃分析。使用定量聚合酶链反应验证显著差异表达的基因。通过免疫组织化学、亚细胞分级分离、电子显微镜和共聚焦显微镜确定基因在结肠内的表达位置。通过焦磷酸测序对DNA甲基化进行定量。
在UC患者的整个结肠中,只有4个探针异常表达,其中骨形态发生蛋白/视黄酸诱导神经特异性3(BRINP3)表达下调最为显著。UC中BRINP3表达减弱与当前炎症无关,与表型或治疗无关,并且在平均22个月后的再次活检时仍保持低水平。BRINP3定位于结肠上皮的刷状缘,其表达受启动子内DNA甲基化的影响。
对UC患者非炎症黏膜活检组织进行全基因组表达分析,发现BRINP3在大部分UC患者的整个结肠中显著下调。该基因水平低可能易患或有助于维持这种疾病中所见的特征性黏膜炎症。