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1.
Cell ; 185(18): 3375-3389.e21, 2022 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35998627

ABSTRACT

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a complex autoimmune disease involving multiple immune cells. To elucidate SLE pathogenesis, it is essential to understand the dysregulated gene expression pattern linked to various clinical statuses with a high cellular resolution. Here, we conducted a large-scale transcriptome study with 6,386 RNA sequencing data covering 27 immune cell types from 136 SLE and 89 healthy donors. We profiled two distinct cell-type-specific transcriptomic signatures: disease-state and disease-activity signatures, reflecting disease establishment and exacerbation, respectively. We then identified candidate biological processes unique to each signature. This study suggested the clinical value of disease-activity signatures, which were associated with organ involvement and therapeutic responses. However, disease-activity signatures were less enriched around SLE risk variants than disease-state signatures, suggesting that current genetic studies may not well capture clinically vital biology. Together, we identified comprehensive gene signatures of SLE, which will provide essential foundations for future genomic and genetic studies.


Subject(s)
Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic , Transcriptome , Humans , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/genetics , Sequence Analysis, RNA
2.
Cell ; 184(11): 3006-3021.e17, 2021 05 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33930287

ABSTRACT

Genetic studies have revealed many variant loci that are associated with immune-mediated diseases. To elucidate the disease pathogenesis, it is essential to understand the function of these variants, especially under disease-associated conditions. Here, we performed a large-scale immune cell gene-expression analysis, together with whole-genome sequence analysis. Our dataset consists of 28 distinct immune cell subsets from 337 patients diagnosed with 10 categories of immune-mediated diseases and 79 healthy volunteers. Our dataset captured distinctive gene-expression profiles across immune cell types and diseases. Expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) analysis revealed dynamic variations of eQTL effects in the context of immunological conditions, as well as cell types. These cell-type-specific and context-dependent eQTLs showed significant enrichment in immune disease-associated genetic variants, and they implicated the disease-relevant cell types, genes, and environment. This atlas deepens our understanding of the immunogenetic functions of disease-associated variants under in vivo disease conditions.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Gene Expression/immunology , Immune System Diseases/genetics , Adult , Female , Gene Expression/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation/immunology , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Genome-Wide Association Study/methods , Humans , Immune System/cytology , Immune System/metabolism , Immune System Diseases/metabolism , Immune System Diseases/physiopathology , Male , Middle Aged , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics , Quantitative Trait Loci/genetics , Quantitative Trait Loci/immunology , Transcriptome/genetics , Whole Genome Sequencing/methods
3.
Nat Immunol ; 23(3): 446-457, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35177831

ABSTRACT

T cells acquire a regulatory phenotype when their T cell antigen receptors (TCRs) experience an intermediate- to high-affinity interaction with a self-peptide presented via the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). Using TCRß sequences from flow-sorted human cells, we identified TCR features that promote regulatory T cell (Treg) fate. From these results, we developed a scoring system to quantify TCR-intrinsic regulatory potential (TiRP). When applied to the tumor microenvironment, TiRP scoring helped to explain why only some T cell clones maintained the conventional T cell (Tconv) phenotype through expansion. To elucidate drivers of these predictive TCR features, we then examined the two elements of the Treg TCR ligand separately: the self-peptide and the human MHC class II molecule. These analyses revealed that hydrophobicity in the third complementarity-determining region (CDR3ß) of the TCR promotes reactivity to self-peptides, while TCR variable gene (TRBV gene) usage shapes the TCR's general propensity for human MHC class II-restricted activation.


Subject(s)
Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell , Cell Lineage , Complementarity Determining Regions/genetics , Peptides , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta/genetics , T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory
4.
Nat Immunol ; 22(6): 781-793, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34031617

ABSTRACT

Multimodal T cell profiling can enable more precise characterization of elusive cell states underlying disease. Here, we integrated single-cell RNA and surface protein data from 500,089 memory T cells to define 31 cell states from 259 individuals in a Peruvian tuberculosis (TB) progression cohort. At immune steady state >4 years after infection and disease resolution, we found that, after accounting for significant effects of age, sex, season and genetic ancestry on T cell composition, a polyfunctional type 17 helper T (TH17) cell-like effector state was reduced in abundance and function in individuals who previously progressed from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) infection to active TB disease. These cells are capable of responding to M.tb peptides. Deconvoluting this state-uniquely identifiable with multimodal analysis-from public data demonstrated that its depletion may precede and persist beyond active disease. Our study demonstrates the power of integrative multimodal single-cell profiling to define cell states relevant to disease and other traits.


Subject(s)
Immunologic Memory , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/immunology , Th17 Cells/immunology , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/immunology , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Case-Control Studies , Child , Disease Progression , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genotyping Techniques , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/isolation & purification , Peru , RNA-Seq , Sex Factors , Single-Cell Analysis , Socioeconomic Factors , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/blood , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/genetics , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/microbiology , Young Adult
5.
Nature ; 606(7912): 120-128, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35545678

ABSTRACT

Non-coding genetic variants may cause disease by modulating gene expression. However, identifying these expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) is complicated by differences in gene regulation across fluid functional cell states within cell types. These states-for example, neurotransmitter-driven programs in astrocytes or perivascular fibroblast differentiation-are obscured in eQTL studies that aggregate cells1,2. Here we modelled eQTLs at single-cell resolution in one complex cell type: memory T cells. Using more than 500,000 unstimulated memory T cells from 259 Peruvian individuals, we show that around one-third of 6,511 cis-eQTLs had effects that were mediated by continuous multimodally defined cell states, such as cytotoxicity and regulatory capacity. In some loci, independent eQTL variants had opposing cell-state relationships. Autoimmune variants were enriched in cell-state-dependent eQTLs, including risk variants for rheumatoid arthritis near ORMDL3 and CTLA4; this indicates that cell-state context is crucial to understanding potential eQTL pathogenicity. Moreover, continuous cell states explained more variation in eQTLs than did conventional discrete categories, such as CD4+ versus CD8+, suggesting that modelling eQTLs and cell states at single-cell resolution can expand insight into gene regulation in functionally heterogeneous cell types.


Subject(s)
Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Memory T Cells , Quantitative Trait Loci , Gene Expression Regulation , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Humans , Memory T Cells/immunology , Memory T Cells/metabolism , Peru , Quantitative Trait Loci/genetics
6.
Nature ; 584(7819): 130-135, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32581364

ABSTRACT

The extent to which the biology of oncogenesis and ageing are shaped by factors that distinguish human populations is unknown. Haematopoietic clones with acquired mutations become common with advancing age and can lead to blood cancers1-10. Here we describe shared and population-specific patterns of genomic mutations and clonal selection in haematopoietic cells on the basis of 33,250 autosomal mosaic chromosomal alterations that we detected in 179,417 Japanese participants in the BioBank Japan cohort and compared with analogous data from the UK Biobank. In this long-lived Japanese population, mosaic chromosomal alterations were detected in more than 35.0% (s.e.m., 1.4%) of individuals older than 90 years, which suggests that such clones trend towards inevitability with advancing age. Japanese and European individuals exhibited key differences in the genomic locations of mutations in their respective haematopoietic clones; these differences predicted the relative rates of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (which is more common among European individuals) and T cell leukaemia (which is more common among Japanese individuals) in these populations. Three different mutational precursors of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (including trisomy 12, loss of chromosomes 13q and 13q, and copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity) were between two and six times less common among Japanese individuals, which suggests that the Japanese and European populations differ in selective pressures on clones long before the development of clinically apparent chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. Japanese and British populations also exhibited very different rates of clones that arose from B and T cell lineages, which predicted the relative rates of B and T cell cancers in these populations. We identified six previously undescribed loci at which inherited variants predispose to mosaic chromosomal alterations that duplicate or remove the inherited risk alleles, including large-effect rare variants at NBN, MRE11 and CTU2 (odds ratio, 28-91). We suggest that selective pressures on clones are modulated by factors that are specific to human populations. Further genomic characterization of clonal selection and cancer in populations from around the world is therefore warranted.


Subject(s)
Aging/genetics , Chromosome Aberrations , Chromosomes, Human/genetics , Clone Cells/metabolism , Genome, Human/genetics , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/metabolism , Mutation , Aged, 80 and over , Alleles , Cell Lineage , Clone Cells/cytology , Clone Cells/pathology , Cohort Studies , Female , Genetic Loci/genetics , Hematopoiesis/genetics , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/cytology , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/pathology , Humans , Japan , Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell/genetics , Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell/pathology , Leukemia, T-Cell/genetics , Leukemia, T-Cell/pathology , Male , Mosaicism , United Kingdom
7.
Am J Hum Genet ; 107(1): 60-71, 2020 07 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32533944

ABSTRACT

Adult height is one of the earliest putative examples of polygenic adaptation in humans. However, this conclusion was recently challenged because residual uncorrected stratification from large-scale consortium studies was considered responsible for the previously noted genetic difference. It thus remains an open question whether height loci exhibit signals of polygenic adaptation in any human population. We re-examined this question, focusing on one of the shortest European populations, the Sardinians, in addition to mainland European populations. We utilized height-associated loci from the Biobank Japan (BBJ) dataset to further alleviate concerns of biased ascertainment of GWAS loci and showed that the Sardinians remain significantly shorter than expected under neutrality (∼0.22 standard deviation shorter than Utah residents with ancestry from northern and western Europe [CEU] on the basis of polygenic height scores, p = 3.89 × 10-4). We also found the trajectory of polygenic height scores between the Sardinian and the British populations diverged over at least the last 10,000 years (p = 0.0082), consistent with a signature of polygenic adaptation driven primarily by the Sardinian population. Although the polygenic score-based analysis showed a much subtler signature in mainland European populations, we found a clear and robust adaptive signature in the UK population by using a haplotype-based statistic, the trait singleton density score (tSDS), driven by the height-increasing alleles (p = 9.1 × 10-4). In summary, by ascertaining height loci in a distant East Asian population, we further supported the evidence of polygenic adaptation at height-associated loci among the Sardinians. In mainland Europeans, the adaptive signature was detected in haplotype-based analysis but not in polygenic score-based analysis.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Body Height/genetics , Multifactorial Inheritance/genetics , Alleles , Asian People/genetics , Biological Specimen Banks , Genetics, Population/methods , Genome, Human/genetics , Genome-Wide Association Study/methods , Haplotypes/genetics , Humans , Italy , Japan , Phenotype , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics , Selection, Genetic/genetics , White People/genetics
8.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 82(11): 1455-1463, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37468219

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Despite the involvement of B cells in the pathogenesis of immune-mediated diseases (IMDs), biological mechanisms underlying their function are scarcely understood. To overcome this gap, here we constructed and investigated a large-scale repertoire catalogue of five B cell subsets of patients with IMDs. METHODS: We mapped B cell receptor regions from RNA sequencing data of sorted B cell subsets. Our dataset consisted of 595 donors under IMDs and health. We characterised the repertoire features from various aspects, including their association with immune cell transcriptomes and clinical features and their response to belimumab treatment. RESULTS: Heavy-chain complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR-H3) length among naïve B cells was shortened among autoimmune diseases. Strong negative correlation between interferon signature strength and CDR-H3 length was observed in naïve B cells and suggested the role for interferon in premature B cell development. VDJ gene usage was skewed especially in plasmablasts and unswitched-memory B cells of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We developed a scoring system to quantify this skewing, and it positively correlated with peripheral helper T cell transcriptomic signatures and negatively correlated with the amount of somatic hyper mutations in plasmablasts, suggesting the association of extrafollicular pathway. Further, this skewing led to high usage of IGHV4-34 gene with 9G4 idiotypes in unswitched-memory B cells, which showed a prominent positive correlation with disease activity in SLE. Gene usage skewing in unswitched-memory B cells was ameliorated after belimumab treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Our multimodal repertoire analysis enabled us the system-level understanding of B cell abnormality in diseases.

9.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 82(6): 809-819, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36918189

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Little is known about the immunology underlying variable treatment response in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We performed large-scale transcriptome analyses of peripheral blood immune cell subsets to identify immune cells that predict treatment resistance. METHODS: We isolated 18 peripheral blood immune cell subsets of 55 patients with RA requiring addition of new treatment and 39 healthy controls, and performed RNA sequencing. Transcriptome changes in RA and treatment effects were systematically characterised. Association between immune cell gene modules and treatment resistance was evaluated. We validated predictive value of identified parameters for treatment resistance using quantitative PCR (qPCR) and mass cytometric analysis cohorts. We also characterised the identified population by synovial single cell RNA-sequencing analysis. RESULTS: Immune cells of patients with RA were characterised by enhanced interferon and IL6-JAK-STAT3 signalling that demonstrate partial normalisation after treatment. A gene expression module of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) reflecting the expansion of dendritic cell precursors (pre-DC) exhibited strongest association with treatment resistance. Type I interferon signalling was negatively correlated to pre-DC gene expression. qPCR and mass cytometric analysis in independent cohorts validated that the pre-DC associated gene expression and the proportion of pre-DC were significantly higher before treatment in treatment-resistant patients. A cluster of synovial DCs showed both features of pre-DC and pro-inflammatory conventional DC2s. CONCLUSIONS: An increase in pre-DC in peripheral blood predicted RA treatment resistance. Pre-DC could have pathophysiological relevance to RA treatment response.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid , Humans , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/drug therapy , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/genetics , Transcriptome , Gene Expression Profiling , Dendritic Cells
10.
Ophthalmology ; 130(4): 361-372, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36423732

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate the genetic architecture of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) in a Japanese population. DESIGN: Genome-wide association study (GWAS). PARTICIPANTS: Three thousand seven hundred seventy-two patients with AMD and 16 770 control participants from the Japanese population were enrolled in the association analyses. METHODS: We conducted a meta-analysis of 2 independent GWASs that included a total of 2663 patients with AMD and 9471 control participants using the imputation reference panel for genotype imputation specified for the Japanese population (n = 3541). A replication study was performed using an independent set of 1109 patients with AMD and 7299 control participants. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Associations of genetic variants with AMD. RESULTS: A meta-analysis of the 2 GWASs identified 6 loci significantly associated with AMD (P < 5.0 × 10-8). Of these loci, 4 were known to be associated with AMD (CFH, C2/FB, TNFRSF10A, and ARMS2), and 2 were novel (rs4147157 near WBP1L and rs76228488 near GATA5). The newly identified associations were confirmed in a replication study (P < 0.01). After the meta-analysis of all datasets, we observed strong associations in these loci (P = 1.88 × 10-12 and P = 1.35 × 10-9 for meta-analysis for rs4147157 and rs76228488, respectively). When we looked up the associations in the reported central serous chorioretinopathy (CSC) GWAS conducted in the Japanese population, both loci were associated significantly with CSC (P = 4.86 × 10-3 and P = 4.28 × 10-3 for rs4147157 and rs76228488, respectively). We performed a genetic colocalization analysis for these loci and estimated that the posterior probabilities of shared causal variants between AMD and CSC were 0.39 and 0.60 for WBP1L and GATA5, respectively. Genetic correlation analysis focusing on the epidemiologically suggested clinical risk factors implicated shared polygenic architecture between AMD and smoking cessation (rg [the measure of genetic correlation] = -0.33; P = 0.01; false discovery rate, 0.099). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings imply shared genetic components conferring the risk of both AMD and CSC. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE(S): Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found after the references.


Subject(s)
Central Serous Chorioretinopathy , Macular Degeneration , Humans , Genome-Wide Association Study , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Central Serous Chorioretinopathy/diagnosis , Central Serous Chorioretinopathy/genetics , Macular Degeneration/genetics , Genotype , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Genetic Loci
11.
Am J Hum Genet ; 104(5): 879-895, 2019 05 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31006511

ABSTRACT

Despite significant progress in annotating the genome with experimental methods, much of the regulatory noncoding genome remains poorly defined. Here we assert that regulatory elements may be characterized by leveraging local epigenomic signatures where specific transcription factors (TFs) are bound. To link these two features, we introduce IMPACT, a genome annotation strategy that identifies regulatory elements defined by cell-state-specific TF binding profiles, learned from 515 chromatin and sequence annotations. We validate IMPACT using multiple compelling applications. First, IMPACT distinguishes between bound and unbound TF motif sites with high accuracy (average AUPRC 0.81, SE 0.07; across 8 tested TFs) and outperforms state-of-the-art TF binding prediction methods, MocapG, MocapS, and Virtual ChIP-seq. Second, in eight tested cell types, RNA polymerase II IMPACT annotations capture more cis-eQTL variation than sequence-based annotations, such as promoters and TSS windows (25% average increase in enrichment). Third, integration with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) summary statistics from European (N = 38,242) and East Asian (N = 22,515) populations revealed that the top 5% of CD4+ Treg IMPACT regulatory elements capture 85.7% of RA h2, the most comprehensive explanation for RA h2 to date. In comparison, the average RA h2 captured by compared CD4+ T histone marks is 42.3% and by CD4+ T specifically expressed gene sets is 36.4%. Lastly, we find that IMPACT may be used in many different cell types to identify complex trait associated regulatory elements.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/metabolism , Epigenome , Epigenomics/methods , Genome, Human , Molecular Sequence Annotation , Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/genetics , Chromatin/genetics , Chromatin/metabolism , Computational Biology/methods , Histones/genetics , Histones/metabolism , Humans , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Protein Binding , Transcription Factors/genetics
12.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 81(6): 845-853, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35236659

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is the prototypical systemic autoimmune disease. While the long-term prognosis has greatly improved, better long-term survival is still necessary. The type I interferon (IFN) signature, a prominent feature of SLE, is not an ideal therapeutic target or outcome predictor. To explore immunological pathways in SLE more precisely, we performed transcriptomic, epigenomic and genomic analyses using 19 immune cell subsets from peripheral blood. METHODS: We sorted 19 immune cell subsets and identified the mRNA expression profiles and genetic polymorphisms in 107 patients with SLE and 92 healthy controls. Combined differentially expressed genes and expression quantitative trait loci analysis was conducted to find key driver genes in SLE pathogenesis. RESULTS: We found transcriptomic, epigenetic and genetic importance of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS)/mitochondrial dysfunction in SLE memory B cells. Particularly, we identified an OXPHOS-regulating gene, PRDX6 (peroxiredoxin 6), as a key driver in SLE B cells. Prdx6-deficient B cells showed upregulated mitochondrial respiration as well as antibody production. We revealed OXPHOS signature was associated with type I IFN signalling-related genes (ISRGs) signature in SLE memory B cells. Furthermore, the gene sets related to innate immune signalling among ISRGs presented correlation with OXPHOS and these two signatures showed associations with SLE organ damage as well as specific clinical phenotypes. CONCLUSION: This work elucidated the potential prognostic marker for SLE. Since OXPHOS consists of the electron transport chain, a functional unit in mitochondria, these findings suggest the importance of mitochondrial dysfunction as a key immunological pathway involved in SLE.


Subject(s)
Interferon Type I , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic , B-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Humans , Interferon Type I/genetics , Interferon Type I/metabolism , Oxidative Phosphorylation , Transcriptome
13.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 2022 May 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35609976

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified >100 risk loci for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), but the disease genes at most loci remain unclear, hampering translation of these genetic discoveries. We aimed to prioritise genes underlying the 110 SLE loci that were identified in the latest East Asian GWAS meta-analysis. METHODS: We built gene expression predictive models in blood B cells, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, monocytes, natural killer cells and peripheral blood cells of 105 Japanese individuals. We performed a transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS) using data from the latest genome-wide association meta-analysis of 208 370 East Asians and searched for candidate genes using TWAS and three data-driven computational approaches. RESULTS: TWAS identified 171 genes for SLE (p<1.0×10-5); 114 (66.7%) showed significance only in a single cell type; 127 (74.3%) were in SLE GWAS loci. TWAS identified a strong association between CD83 and SLE (p<7.7×10-8). Meta-analysis of genetic associations in the existing 208 370 East Asian and additional 1498 cases and 3330 controls found a novel single-variant association at rs72836542 (OR=1.11, p=4.5×10-9) around CD83. For the 110 SLE loci, we identified 276 gene candidates, including 104 genes at recently-identified SLE novel loci. We demonstrated in vitro that putative causal variant rs61759532 exhibited an allele-specific regulatory effect on ACAP1, and that presence of the SLE risk allele decreased ACAP1 expression. CONCLUSIONS: Cell-level TWAS in six types of immune cells complemented SLE gene discovery and guided the identification of novel genetic associations. The gene findings shed biological insights into SLE genetic associations.

14.
J Autoimmun ; 133: 102907, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36126366

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) alleles regulate susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and immune-mediated diseases. This study aims to elucidate the impact of HLA alleles to T cell subsets. METHODS: We performed genome-wide and HLA allele association analysis for T cell receptor (TCR) beta chain repertoire in 13 purified T cell subsets from the ImmuNexUT database, consisting of 407 donors with ten immune-mediated diseases and healthy controls. RESULTS: HLA class II alleles were associated with TRBV gene usage and the public clones of CD4 T cells, while HLA class I alleles were associated with CD8 T cells. RA-risk and immune-mediated diseases-risk HLA alleles were associated with TRBV gene usage of naive and effector CD4 T cell subsets and public clones accumulating in Th17. Clonal diversity was independent of HLA alleles and was correlated with transcriptome changes that reflect TCR signaling. CONCLUSION: This study revealed in vivo evidence that both HLA alleles and environmental factors shape naive and effector TCR repertoires in RA and immune-mediated diseases patients.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid , CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes , Humans , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/genetics , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell/genetics
15.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 80(4): 440-450, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33139312

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Synovial fibroblasts (SFs) are one of the major components of the inflamed synovium in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We aimed to gain insight into the pathogenic mechanisms of SFs through elucidating the genetic contribution to molecular regulatory networks under inflammatory condition. METHODS: SFs from RA and osteoarthritis (OA) patients (n=30 each) were stimulated with eight different cytokines (interferon (IFN)-α, IFN-γ, tumour necrosis factor-α, interleukin (IL)-1ß, IL-6/sIL-6R, IL-17, transforming growth factor-ß1, IL-18) or a combination of all 8 (8-mix). Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were fractioned into five immune cell subsets (CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, B cells, natural killer (NK) cells, monocytes). Integrative analyses including mRNA expression, histone modifications (H3K27ac, H3K4me1, H3K4me3), three-dimensional (3D) genome architecture and genetic variations of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were performed. RESULTS: Unstimulated RASFs differed markedly from OASFs in the transcriptome and epigenome. Meanwhile, most of the responses to stimulations were shared between the diseases. Activated SFs expressed pathogenic genes, including CD40 whose induction by IFN-γ was significantly affected by an RA risk SNP (rs6074022). On chromatin remodelling in activated SFs, RA risk loci were enriched in clusters of enhancers (super-enhancers; SEs) induced by synergistic proinflammatory cytokines. An RA risk SNP (rs28411362), located in an SE under synergistically acting cytokines, formed 3D contact with the promoter of metal-regulatory transcription factor-1 (MTF1) gene, whose binding motif showed significant enrichment in stimulation specific-SEs. Consistently, inhibition of MTF1 suppressed cytokine and chemokine production from SFs and ameliorated mice model of arthritis. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings established the dynamic landscape of activated SFs and yielded potential therapeutic targets associated with genetic risk of RA.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid , Leukocytes, Mononuclear , Animals , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Cytokines/metabolism , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Humans , Leukocytes, Mononuclear/metabolism , Mice , Synovial Membrane/metabolism
16.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 80(5): 632-640, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33272962

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), an autoimmune disorder, has been associated with nearly 100 susceptibility loci. Nevertheless, these loci only partially explain SLE heritability and their putative causal variants are rarely prioritised, which make challenging to elucidate disease biology. To detect new SLE loci and causal variants, we performed the largest genome-wide meta-analysis for SLE in East Asian populations. METHODS: We newly genotyped 10 029 SLE cases and 180 167 controls and subsequently meta-analysed them jointly with 3348 SLE cases and 14 826 controls from published studies in East Asians. We further applied a Bayesian statistical approach to localise the putative causal variants for SLE associations. RESULTS: We identified 113 genetic regions including 46 novel loci at genome-wide significance (p<5×10-8). Conditional analysis detected 233 association signals within these loci, which suggest widespread allelic heterogeneity. We detected genome-wide associations at six new missense variants. Bayesian statistical fine-mapping analysis prioritised the putative causal variants to a small set of variants (95% credible set size ≤10) for 28 association signals. We identified 110 putative causal variants with posterior probabilities ≥0.1 for 57 SLE loci, among which we prioritised 10 most likely putative causal variants (posterior probability ≥0.8). Linkage disequilibrium score regression detected genetic correlations for SLE with albumin/globulin ratio (rg=-0.242) and non-albumin protein (rg=0.238). CONCLUSION: This study reiterates the power of large-scale genome-wide meta-analysis for novel genetic discovery. These findings shed light on genetic and biological understandings of SLE.


Subject(s)
Asian People/genetics , Genetic Loci/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/ethnology , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/ethnology , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/genetics , Adult , Bayes Theorem , Case-Control Studies , China/epidemiology , China/ethnology , Asia, Eastern/ethnology , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/epidemiology , Genetic Variation , Genome-Wide Association Study , Genotype , Humans , Japan/epidemiology , Japan/ethnology , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/epidemiology , Male , Middle Aged , Prevalence , Republic of Korea/epidemiology , Republic of Korea/ethnology
17.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 46(22): 11898-11909, 2018 12 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30407537

ABSTRACT

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) modulate the post-transcriptional regulation of target genes and are related to biology of complex human traits, but genetic landscape of miRNAs remains largely unknown. Given the strikingly tissue-specific miRNA expression profiles, we here expand a previous method to quantitatively evaluate enrichment of genome-wide association study (GWAS) signals on miRNA-target gene networks (MIGWAS) to further estimate tissue-specific enrichment. Our approach integrates tissue-specific expression profiles of miRNAs (∼1800 miRNAs in 179 cells) with GWAS to test whether polygenic signals enrich in miRNA-target gene networks and whether they fall within specific tissues. We applied MIGWAS to 49 GWASs (nTotal = 3 520 246), and successfully identified biologically relevant tissues. Further, MIGWAS could point miRNAs as candidate biomarkers of the trait. As an illustrative example, we performed differentially expressed miRNA analysis between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients and healthy controls (n = 63). We identified novel biomarker miRNAs (e.g. hsa-miR-762) by integrating differentially expressed miRNAs with MIGWAS results for RA, as well as novel associated loci with significant genetic risk (rs56656810 at MIR762 at 16q11; n = 91 482, P = 3.6 × 10-8). Our result highlighted that miRNA-target gene network contributes to human disease genetics in a cell type-specific manner, which could yield an efficient screening of miRNAs as promising biomarkers.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/genetics , Asthma/genetics , Colitis, Ulcerative/genetics , Gene Regulatory Networks , Genome, Human , Graves Disease/genetics , MicroRNAs/genetics , Algorithms , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/immunology , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/pathology , Asthma/immunology , Asthma/pathology , Biomarkers/metabolism , Case-Control Studies , Colitis, Ulcerative/immunology , Colitis, Ulcerative/pathology , Computational Biology/methods , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation , Genetic Loci , Genome-Wide Association Study , Graves Disease/immunology , Graves Disease/pathology , Humans , MicroRNAs/classification , MicroRNAs/metabolism , Multifactorial Inheritance/genetics , Multifactorial Inheritance/immunology , Organ Specificity , Signal Transduction
18.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 78(4): 509-518, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30679154

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease that is characterised by autoantibody production and widespread inflammation damaging many organs. Previous genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have revealed over 80 genetic determinants of SLE, but they collectively explain a fraction of the heritability, and only a few were proven in vivo for the involvement in SLE. We conducted a meta-analysis of SLE GWAS in the Japanese population, followed by functional analyses of a susceptibility gene with use of mutant mice. METHODS: We conducted a meta-analysis of two GWASs comprising a total of 1363 cases and 5536 controls using the 1000 Genome Project data as an imputation reference. Enrichment analyses for functional annotations were conducted. We examined Phospholipase D4 (Pld4) mutant mice to assess functional involvement of a genetic determinant. RESULTS: We found a total of 14 significant loci, which included rs2582511 in AHNAK2/PLD4 recently reported in a Chinese study and a novel locus of rs143181706 in MAMLD1 (p=7.9×10-11 and 3.7×10-8, respectively). PLD4 risk allele was associated with anti-dsDNA antibody production. Enrichment analysis of genetic signals revealed involvement of a wide range of immune-related cells and pathways. Pld4 mutant mice revealed remarkably low body weight. The mice demonstrated autoimmune phenotypes compatible with SLE, including splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy, expansion of B cells and hypersecretion of BAFF and production of autoantibodies especially anti-nuclear antibody and anti-dsDNA antibody. CONCLUSIONS: We found a novel susceptibility gene to SLE. Pld4 mutant mice revealed autoimmune phenotypes suggesting functional involvement of PLD4 with the basics of SLE.


Subject(s)
Autoimmune Diseases/genetics , Exonucleases/genetics , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/genetics , Animals , Antibodies, Antinuclear/biosynthesis , Autoantibodies/biosynthesis , Autoimmune Diseases/immunology , Case-Control Studies , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genome-Wide Association Study , Humans , Immunophenotyping , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/immunology , Male , Mice, Mutant Strains , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
19.
Clin Immunol ; 186: 9-13, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28867252

ABSTRACT

Genome-wide association studies have identified hundreds of risk variants associated with human autoimmune diseases. Recent evidence suggests that a substantial portion of them affect gene expression in specific cell types. To obtain the functional insights of GWAS findings, comprehensive characterization of genetic variants in human genome is a key task. In parallel with GWAS, many researches in functional genomics have been conducted in the past decade, and our understandings of cell type-specific gene regulatory system have been substantially improved. In this review, we will introduce the main research topics in functional genomics, and explain their utility to understand biological mechanisms of autoimmune diseases.


Subject(s)
Autoimmunity/genetics , Autoimmune Diseases/genetics , Genome-Wide Association Study , Genomics , Humans
20.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 77(4): 602-611, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29331962

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs) are a heterogeneous group of rare autoimmune diseases in which both genetic and environmental factors play important roles. To identify genetic factors of IIM including polymyositis, dermatomyositis (DM) and clinically amyopathic DM (CADM), we performed the first genome-wide association study for IIM in an Asian population. METHODS: We genotyped and tested 496 819 single nucleotide polymorphism for association using 576 patients with IIM and 6270 control subjects. We also examined the causal mechanism of disease-associated variants by in silico analyses using publicly available data sets as well as by in in vitro analyses using reporter assays and apoptosis assays. RESULTS: We identified a variant in WDFY4 that was significantly associated with CADM (rs7919656; OR=3.87; P=1.5×10-8). This variant had a cis-splicing quantitative trait locus (QTL) effect for a truncated WDFY4isoform (tr-WDFY4), with higher expression in the risk allele. Transexpression QTL analysis of this variant showed a positive correlation with the expression of NF-κB associated genes. Furthermore, we demonstrated that both WDFY4 and tr-WDFY4 interacted with pattern recognition receptors such as TLR3, TLR4, TLR9 and MDA5 and augmented the NF-κB activation by these receptors. WDFY4 isoforms also enhanced MDA5-induced apoptosis to a greater extent in the tr-WDFY4-transfected cells. CONCLUSIONS: As CADM is characterised by the appearance of anti-MDA5 autoantibodies and severe lung inflammation, the WDFY4 variant may play a critical role in the pathogenesis of CADM.


Subject(s)
Dermatomyositis/genetics , Interferon-Induced Helicase, IFIH1/genetics , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/genetics , RNA Splicing/genetics , Signal Transduction/genetics , Adult , Aged , Alleles , Apoptosis/genetics , Asian People/genetics , Autoantibodies/genetics , Case-Control Studies , Female , Genome-Wide Association Study , Genotype , Genotyping Techniques , Humans , Interferon-Induced Helicase, IFIH1/immunology , Male , Middle Aged , NF-kappa B/genetics , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Polymyositis/genetics , Protein Isoforms/genetics , Quantitative Trait Loci/genetics , Risk Factors
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