[HTML][HTML] Cellular dissection of psoriasis for transcriptome analyses and the post-GWAS era

WR Swindell, PE Stuart, MK Sarkar, JJ Voorhees… - BMC medical …, 2014 - Springer
BMC medical genomics, 2014Springer
Background Genome-scale studies of psoriasis have been used to identify genes of
potential relevance to disease mechanisms. For many identified genes, however, the cell
type mediating disease activity is uncertain, which has limited our ability to design gene
functional studies based on genomic findings. Methods We identified differentially
expressed genes (DEGs) with altered expression in psoriasis lesions (n= 216 patients), as
well as candidate genes near susceptibility loci from psoriasis GWAS studies. These gene …
Background
Genome-scale studies of psoriasis have been used to identify genes of potential relevance to disease mechanisms. For many identified genes, however, the cell type mediating disease activity is uncertain, which has limited our ability to design gene functional studies based on genomic findings.
Methods
We identified differentially expressed genes (DEGs) with altered expression in psoriasis lesions (n = 216 patients), as well as candidate genes near susceptibility loci from psoriasis GWAS studies. These gene sets were characterized based upon their expression across 10 cell types present in psoriasis lesions. Susceptibility-associated variation at intergenic (non-coding) loci was evaluated to identify sites of allele-specific transcription factor binding.
Results
Half of DEGs showed highest expression in skin cells, although the dominant cell type differed between psoriasis-increased DEGs (keratinocytes, 35%) and psoriasis-decreased DEGs (fibroblasts, 33%). In contrast, psoriasis GWAS candidates tended to have highest expression in immune cells (71%), with a significant fraction showing maximal expression in neutrophils (24%, P < 0.001). By identifying candidate cell types for genes near susceptibility loci, we could identify and prioritize SNPs at which susceptibility variants are predicted to influence transcription factor binding. This led to the identification of potentially causal (non-coding) SNPs for which susceptibility variants influence binding of AP-1, NF-κB, IRF1, STAT3 and STAT4.
Conclusions
These findings underscore the role of innate immunity in psoriasis and highlight neutrophils as a cell type linked with pathogenetic mechanisms. Assignment of candidate cell types to genes emerging from GWAS studies provides a first step towards functional analysis, and we have proposed an approach for generating hypotheses to explain GWAS hits at intergenic loci.
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