A disease-associated gene desert directs macrophage inflammation through ETS2
Author:
Stankey C. T.ORCID, Bourges C.ORCID, Haag L. M.ORCID, Turner-Stokes T., Piedade A. P., Palmer-Jones C., Papa I.ORCID, Silva dos Santos M.ORCID, Zhang Q., Cameron A. J.ORCID, Legrini A., Zhang T., Wood C. S., New F. N.ORCID, Randzavola L. O., Speidel L., Brown A. C., Hall A., Saffioti F.ORCID, Parkes E. C., Edwards W., Direskeneli H., Grayson P. C., Jiang L., Merkel P. A., Saruhan-Direskeneli G.ORCID, Sawalha A. H.ORCID, Tombetti E., Quaglia A., Thorburn D., Knight J. C.ORCID, Rochford A. P., Murray C. D., Divakar P., Green M., Nye E., MacRae J. I.ORCID, Jamieson N. B.ORCID, Skoglund P., Cader M. Z., Wallace C.ORCID, Thomas D. C.ORCID, Lee J. C.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractIncreasing rates of autoimmune and inflammatory disease present a burgeoning threat to human health1. This is compounded by the limited efficacy of available treatments1 and high failure rates during drug development2, highlighting an urgent need to better understand disease mechanisms. Here we show how functional genomics could address this challenge. By investigating an intergenic haplotype on chr21q22—which has been independently linked to inflammatory bowel disease, ankylosing spondylitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis and Takayasu’s arteritis3–6—we identify that the causal gene, ETS2, is a central regulator of human inflammatory macrophages and delineate the shared disease mechanism that amplifies ETS2 expression. Genes regulated by ETS2 were prominently expressed in diseased tissues and more enriched for inflammatory bowel disease GWAS hits than most previously described pathways. Overexpressing ETS2 in resting macrophages reproduced the inflammatory state observed in chr21q22-associated diseases, with upregulation of multiple drug targets, including TNF and IL-23. Using a database of cellular signatures7, we identified drugs that might modulate this pathway and validated the potent anti-inflammatory activity of one class of small molecules in vitro and ex vivo. Together, this illustrates the power of functional genomics, applied directly in primary human cells, to identify immune-mediated disease mechanisms and potential therapeutic opportunities.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference114 articles.
1. Miller, F. W. The increasing prevalence of autoimmunity and autoimmune diseases: an urgent call to action for improved understanding, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention. Curr. Opin. Immunol. 80, 102266 (2023). 2. Dowden, H. & Munro, J. Trends in clinical success rates and therapeutic focus. Nat. Rev. Drug Discov. 18, 495–496 (2019). 3. de Lange, K. M. et al. Genome-wide association study implicates immune activation of multiple integrin genes in inflammatory bowel disease. Nat. Genet. 49, 256–261 (2017). 4. International Genetics of Ankylosing Spondylitis Consortium et al. Identification of multiple risk variants for ankylosing spondylitis through high-density genotyping of immune-related loci. Nat. Genet. 45, 730–738 (2013). 5. Ji, S. G. et al. Genome-wide association study of primary sclerosing cholangitis identifies new risk loci and quantifies the genetic relationship with inflammatory bowel disease. Nat. Genet. 49, 269–273 (2017).
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|