Transcriptomic profile of adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes after neonatal encephalopathy

Author:

Montaldo Paolo,Cunnington Aubrey,Oliveira Vania,Swamy Ravi,Bandya Prathik,Pant Stuti,Lally Peter J.,Ivain Phoebe,Mendoza Josephine,Atreja Gaurav,Padmesh Vadakepat,Baburaj Mythili,Sebastian Monica,Yasashwi Indiramma,Kamalarathnam Chinnathambi,Chandramohan Rema,Mangalabharathi Sundaram,Kumaraswami Kumutha,Kumar Shobha,Benakappa Naveen,Manerkar Swati,Mondhkar Jayashree,Prakash Vinayagam,Sajjid Mohammed,Seeralar Arasar,Jahan Ismat,Moni Sadeka Choudhury,Shahidullah Mohammod,Sujatha Radhika,Chandrasekaran Manigandan,Ramji Siddarth,Shankaran Seetha,Kaforou Myrsini,Herberg Jethro,Thayyil Sudhin

Abstract

AbstractA rapid and early diagnostic test to identify the encephalopathic babies at risk of adverse outcome may accelerate the development of neuroprotectants. We examined if a whole blood transcriptomic signature measured soon after birth, predicts adverse neurodevelopmental outcome eighteen months after neonatal encephalopathy. We performed next generation sequencing on whole blood ribonucleic acid obtained within six hours of birth from the first 47 encephalopathic babies recruited to the Hypothermia for Encephalopathy in Low and middle-income countries (HELIX) trial. Two infants with blood culture positive sepsis were excluded, and the data from remaining 45 were analysed. A total of 855 genes were significantly differentially expressed between the good and adverse outcome groups, of which RGS1 and SMC4 were the most significant. Biological pathway analysis adjusted for gender, trial randomisation allocation (cooling therapy versus usual care) and estimated blood leukocyte proportions revealed over-representation of genes from pathways related to melatonin and polo-like kinase in babies with adverse outcome. These preliminary data suggest that transcriptomic profiling may be a promising tool for rapid risk stratification in neonatal encephalopathy. It may provide insights into biological mechanisms and identify novel therapeutic targets for neuroprotection.

Funder

Medical Research Council, UK

National Institute for Health Research

Wellcome Trust

Gates and Melinda Foundation and Weston Garfield

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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