Publication
Functional genomics and prognosis in sarcoidosis--the critical role of antigen presentation
Journal Paper/Review - Mar 1, 2004
Rutherford Robert M, Staedtler Frank, Kehren Jeanne, Chibout Salah-Dine, Joos Ladina, Tamm Michel, Gilmartin John J, Brutsche Martin
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PubMed
Citation
Type
Journal
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Issn Print
Pages
Brief description/objective
BACKGROUND: Sarcoidosis is a systemic disorder of unknown cause, highly variable phenotype and unpredictable outcome. Antigen processing, inflammatory response and immunomodulation appear critical to development and prognosis of the disease. METHODS: We performed a comprehensive genomic analysis, applying high-density human GeneChip probe arrays (HUG95A, Affymetrix Inc.) for gene expression profiling from peripheral blood of patients with acute pulmonary sarcoidosis (n = 12) and matched healthy controls (n = 12), mean age 36 +/- 12 and 33 +/- 10 years respectively. RESULTS: At follow-up (18 [15-24] months), 7 patients had self-limited disease and 5 had persistent disease. Significantly different expression comparing patients and controls was identified for 1,860 (14.9%) and 729 (5.8%) gene products at p = 0.05 and p = 0.01 levels respectively. Genes closely associated with persistent disease included HLA-DRB1*1501 DQB1*0602, TNFA, NFKB, cyclic AMP-responsive element modulator (CREM) and T-cell activation marker CD69. IL1B, IL8, growth related (GRO)-beta/-gamma and CCR 2,5,6 were closely associated with self-limited disease. CONCLUSION: We hypothesize that, in self-limited disease, greater effector cell activation leads to successful antigen elimination/tolerance, whereas HLA-DRB1*1501 DQBI*0602-mediated, probably defective/partial T-lymphocyte activation results in an inefficient primary immune response, antigen intolerance and persistent disease.