Author:
Pekayvaz Kami,Losert Corinna,Knottenberg Viktoria,van Blokland Irene V.,Oelen Roy,Groot Hilde E.,Benjamins Jan Walter,Brambs Sophia,Kaiser Rainer,Eivers Luke,Polewka Vivien,Escaig Raphael,Joppich Markus,Janjic Aleksandar,Popp Oliver,Petzold Tobias,Zimmer Ralf,Enard Wolfgang,Saar Kathrin,Mertins Philipp,Huebner Norbert,van der Harst Pim,Franke Lude H.,van der Wijst Monique G. P.,Massberg Steffen,Heinig Matthias,Nicolai Leo,Stark Konstantin
Abstract
AbstractAcute and chronic coronary syndromes (ACS and CCS) are leading causes of mortality. Inflammation is considered to be a key pathogenic driver, but immune states in humans and their clinical implications remain poorly understood. We hypothesized that Multi-Omic blood analysis combined with Multi-Omic Factor Analysis (MOFA) might uncover hidden sources of variance providing pathophysiological insights linked to clinical needs. Here, we compile a single cell longitudinal dataset of the circulating immune states in ACS & CCS (13x103clinical & Multi-Omic variables, n=117 subjects, n=838 analyzed samples) from two independent cohorts. Using MOFA, we identify multilayered factors, characterized by distinct classical monocyte and CD4+& CD8+T cell states that explain a large proportion of inter-patient variance. Three factors either reflect disease course or predict outcome in coronary syndromes. The diagnostic performance of these factors reaches beyond established biomarkers highlighting the potential use of MOFA as a novel tool for multilayered patient risk stratification.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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