Defining the Celiac Disease Transcriptome using Clinical Pathology Specimens Reveals Biologic Pathways and Supports Diagnosis

Author:

Loberman-Nachum Nurit,Sosnovski Katya,Di Segni Ayelet,Efroni Gilat,Braun Tzipi,BenShoshan Marina,Anafi Lait,Avivi Camila,Barshack Iris,Shouval Dror S.,Denson Lee A.,Amir AmnonORCID,Unger Ron,Weiss Batia,Haberman YaelORCID

Abstract

Abstract Celiac disease is provoked by gluten exposure, but the complete pathogenic process in the duodenum and the loss of tolerance to gluten is not well understood. We aimed to define the core celiac transcriptomic signature and pathologic pathways in pre-treatment formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) duodenum biopsies used for clinical diagnosis. We use mRNAseq to define pre-treatment diagnostic duodenum gene expression in 54 pediatric celiac patients and non-celiac controls, and we validate our key findings in two independent cohorts of 67 adults and pediatric participants that used fresh frozen biopsies. We further define similar and divergent genes and pathways in 177 small bowel Crohn disease patients and controls. We observe a marked suppression of mature epithelial metabolic functions in celiac patients, overlapping substantially with the Crohn disease signature. A marked adaptive immune response was noted for the up-regulated signature including interferon response, alpha-beta, and gamma-delta T-cells that overlapped to some extent with the Crohn disease signature. However, we also identified a celiac disease specific signature linked to increased cell proliferation, nuclear division, and cell cycle activity that was localized primarily to the epithelia as noted by CCNB1 and Ki67 staining. Lastly, we demonstrate the utility of the transcriptomic date to correctly classify disease or healthy states in the discovery and validation cohorts. Our data supplement recently published datasets providing insights into celiac pathogenesis using clinical pathology FFPE samples, and can stimulate new approaches to address this highly prevalent condition.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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