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Cell-specific expression and pathway analyses reveal alterations in trauma-related human T cell and monocyte pathways

Authors :
Laudanski, Krzysztof
Miller-Graziano, Carol
Xiao, Wenzhong
Mindrinos, Michael N.
Richards, Daniel R.
De, Asit
Moldawer, Lyle L.
Maier, Ronald V.
Bankey, Paul
Baker, Henry V.
Brownstein, Bernard H.
Cobb, J. Perren
Calvano, Steve E.
Davis, Ronald W.
Tompkins, Ronald G.
Billiar, Timothy R.
Camp, David, II
Campbell-Finnerty, Celeste
Casella, George
Chaudry, Irshad H.
Choudhry, Mashkoor
Elson, Constance
Freeman, Bradley
Gamelli, Richard L.
Gibran, Nicole S.
Harbrecht, Brian G.
Hayden, Douglas L.
Herndon, David N.
Horton, Jureta W.
Hubbard, William
Hunt, John Lee
Johnson, Jeffrey
Klein, Matthew B.
Lederer, James A.
Logvinenko, Tanya
Lowry, Stephen F.
Mannick, John A.
Mason, Philip H.
McDonald-Smith, Grace P.
McKinley, Bruce A.
Minei, Joseph P.
Moore, Ernest E.
Moore, Frederick A.
Nathens, Avery B.
O'Keefe, Grant E.
Rahme, Laurence G.
Remick, Daniel G., Jr.
Schoenfeld, David A.
Shapiro, Michael B.
Schwacha, Martin
Silver, Geoffrey M.
Smith, Richard D.
Storey, John
Toner, Mehmet
Warren, H. Shaw
West, Michael A.
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. Oct 17, 2006, Vol. 103 Issue 42, p15564, 6 p.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Monitoring genome-wide, cell-specific responses to human disease, although challenging, holds great promise for the future of medicine. Patients with injuries severe enough to develop multiple organ dysfunction syndrome have multiple immune derangements, including T cell apoptosis and anergy combined with depressed monocyte antigen presentation. Genome-wide expression analysis of highly enriched circulating leukocyte subpopulations, combined with cell-specific pathway analyses, offers an opportunity to discover leukocyte regulatory networks in critically injured patients. Severe injury induced significant changes in T cell (5,693 genes), monocyte (2,801 genes), and total leukocyte (3,437 genes) transcriptomes, with only 911 of these genes common to all three cell populations (12%). T cell-specific pathway analyses identified increased gene expression of several inhibitory receptors (PD-1, CD152, NRP-1, and Lag3) and concomitant decreases in stimulatory receptors (CD28, CD4, and IL-2R[alpha]). Functional analysis of T cells and monocytes confirmed reduced T cell proliferation and increased cell surface expression of negative signaling receptors paired with decreased monocyte costimulation ligands. Thus, genome-wide expression from highly enriched cell populations combined with knowledge-based pathway analyses leads to the identification of regulatory networks differentially expressed in injured patients. Importantly, application of cell separation, genome-wide expression, and cell-specific pathway analyses can be used to discover pathway alterations in human disease. anergy | apoptosis | costimulatory receptors | immunosuppression | network analysis

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278424
Volume :
103
Issue :
42
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.154003847