View : 239 Download: 0

Molecular signature of neutrophil extracellular trap mediating disease module in idiopathic inflammatory myopathy

Title
Molecular signature of neutrophil extracellular trap mediating disease module in idiopathic inflammatory myopathy
Authors
Moon S.-J.Jung S.M.Baek I.-W.Park K.-S.Kim K.-J.
Ewha Authors
백인운
SCOPUS Author ID
백인운scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
Journal of Autoimmunity
ISSN
8968-8411JCR Link
Citation
Journal of Autoimmunity vol. 138
Keywords
Idiopathic inflammatory myopathyMolecular signatureMuscleNeutrophil
Publisher
Academic Press
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The rarity and heterogeneity of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM) pose challenges for researching IIM in affected individuals. We analyzed integrated transcriptomic datasets obtained using muscle tissues from patients with five distinct IIM subtypes to investigate the shared and distinctive cellular and molecular characteristics. A transcriptomic dataset of muscle tissues from normal controls (n = 105) and patients with dermatomyositis (n = 89), polymyositis (n = 33), inclusion body myositis (n = 121), immune-mediated necrotizing myositis (n = 75), and anti-synthetase syndrome (n = 18) was used for differential gene-expression analysis, functional-enrichment analysis, gene set-enrichment analysis, disease-module identification, and kernel-based diffusion scoring. Damage-associated molecular pattern-associated pathways and neutrophil-mediated immunity were significantly enriched across different IIM subtypes, although their activities varied. Interferons-signaling pathways were differentially activated across all five IIM subtypes. In particular, neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) formation was significantly activated and correlated with Fcγ R-mediated signaling pathways. NET formation-associated genes were key for establishing disease modules, and FCGRs, C1QA, and SERPINE1 markedly perturbed the disease modules. Integrated transcriptomic analysis of muscle tissues identified NETs as key components of neutrophil-mediated immunity involved in the pathogenesis of IIM subtypes and, thus, has therapeutically targetable value. © 2023 Elsevier Ltd
DOI
10.1016/j.jaut.2023.103063
Appears in Collections:
의료원 > 의료원 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE