A pilot integrative analysis of colonic gene expression, gut microbiota, and immune infiltration in primary sclerosing cholangitis-inflammatory bowel disease: association of disease with bile acid pathways.
Author
Quraishi, Mohammed NabilAcharjee, Animesh
Beggs, Andrew D
Horniblow, Richard
Tselepis, Chris
Gkoutos, Georgios
Ghosh, Subrata

Rossiter, A E
Loman, Nicholas
van Schaik, Willem
Withers, David
Walters, Julian R F
Hirschfield, Gideon M
Iqbal, Tariq H
Publication date
2020-07-30
Metadata
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Background: Although a majority of patients with PSC have colitis [PSC-IBD; primary sclerosing cholangitis-inflammatory bowel disease], this is phenotypically different from ulcerative colitis [UC]. We sought to define further the pathophysiological differences between PSC-IBD and UC, by applying a comparative and integrative approach to colonic gene expression, gut microbiota and immune infiltration data. Methods: Colonic biopsies were collected from patients with PSC-IBD [n = 10], UC [n = 10], and healthy controls [HC; n = 10]. Shotgun RNA-sequencing for differentially expressed colonic mucosal genes [DEGs], 16S rRNA analysis for microbial profiling, and immunophenotyping were performed followed by multi-omic integration. Results: The colonic transcriptome differed significantly between groups [p = 0.01]. Colonic transcriptomes from HC were different from both UC [1343 DEGs] and PSC-IBD [4312 DEGs]. Of these genes, only 939 had shared differential gene expression in both UC and PSC-IBD compared with HC. Imputed pathways were predominantly associated with upregulation of immune response and microbial defense in both disease cohorts compared with HC. There were 1692 DEGs between PSC-IBD and UC. Bile acid signalling pathways were upregulated in PSC-IBD compared with UC [p = 0.02]. Microbiota profiles were different between the three groups [p = 0.01]; with inferred function in PSC-IBD also being consistent with dysregulation of bile acid metabolism. Th17 cells and IL17-producing CD4 cells were increased in both PSC-IBD and UC when compared with HC [p < 0.05]. Multi-omic integration revealed networks involved in bile acid homeostasis and cancer regulation in PSC-IBD. Conclusions: Colonic transcriptomic and microbiota analysis in PSC-IBD point toward dysregulation of colonic bile acid homeostasis compared with UC. This highlights important mechanisms and suggests the possibility of novel approaches in treating PSC-IBD.Citation
Quraishi MN, Acharjee A, Beggs AD, Horniblow R, Tselepis C, Gkoutos G, Ghosh S, Rossiter AE, Loman N, van Schaik W, Withers D, Walters JRF, Hirschfield GM, Iqbal TH. A Pilot Integrative Analysis of Colonic Gene Expression, Gut Microbiota, and Immune Infiltration in Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis-Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Association of Disease With Bile Acid Pathways. J Crohns Colitis. 2020 Jul 30;14(7):935-947. doi: 10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjaa021Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://academic.oup.com/ecco-jccPMID
32016358Journal
Journal of Crohn's & ColitisPublisher
Oxford University Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjaa021