Laser Capture Microscopy RNA Sequencing for Topological Mapping of Synovial Pathology During Rheumatoid Arthritis

Author:

Van Espen Benjamin1,Prideaux E. Barton1,Wilson Andrew R.1,Machado Camilla R. L.1,Sendo Sho1ORCID,Parker James2,Seumois Grégory3,Sacchetti Cristiano1,Belongia Anna C.1,Perumal Narayanan B.2,Vijayanand Pandurangan4,Linnik Matthew D.2,Benschop Robert J.2,Wang Wei1,Bottini Nunzio5ORCID,Firestein Gary S.1ORCID,Stanford Stephanie M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of California San Diego La Jolla

2. Eli Lilly and Company Indianapolis Indiana

3. La Jolla Institute for Immunology La Jolla California

4. University of California, San Diego, and La Jolla Institute for Immunology La Jolla California

5. University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, and Kao Autoimmunity Institute, Cedars‐Sinai Medical Center Los Angeles California

Abstract

ObjectiveRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune disease in which the joint lining or synovium becomes highly inflamed and majorly contributes to disease progression. Understanding pathogenic processes in RA synovium is critical for identifying therapeutic targets. We performed laser capture microscopy (LCM) followed by RNA sequencing (LCM‐RNAseq) to study regional transcriptomes throughout RA synovium.MethodsSynovial lining, sublining, and vessel samples were captured by LCM from seven patients with RA and seven patients with osteoarthritis (OA). RNAseq was performed on RNA extracted from captured tissue. Principal component analysis was performed on the sample set by disease state. Differential expression analysis was performed between disease states based on log2 fold change and q value parameters. Pathway analysis was performed using the Reactome Pathway Database on differentially expressed genes among disease states. Significantly enriched pathways in each synovial region were selected based on the false discovery rate.ResultsRA and OA transcriptomes were distinguishable by principal component analysis. Pairwise comparisons of synovial lining, sublining, and vessel samples between RA and OA revealed substantial differences in transcriptional patterns throughout the synovium. Hierarchical clustering of pathways based on significance revealed a pattern of association between biologic function and synovial topology. Analysis of pathways uniquely enriched in each region revealed distinct phenotypic abnormalities. As examples, RA lining samples were marked by anomalous immune cell signaling, RA sublining samples were marked by aberrant cell cycle, and RA vessel samples were marked by alterations in heme scavenging.ConclusionLCM‐RNAseq confirms reported transcriptional differences between the RA synovium and the OA synovium and provides evidence supporting a relationship between synovial topology and molecular anomalies in RA.

Funder

NIH

Eli Lilly and Company

Publisher

Wiley

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