کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
6086961 | 1589419 | 2016 | 12 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Response to MTX is characterized by preponderant innate immune activation in responders and non-response by adaptive immune activation.
- This was identified comparing responders and non-responders after stratification for HLA-DRB4 expression, a SE paralogue of DRB1.
- Preponderant innate immune activation in the majority of early RA patients with response to MTX suggests a role for chronic environmental triggers.
Effective drug selection is the current challenge in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Treatment failure may follow different pathomechanisms and therefore require investigation of molecularly defined subgroups. In this exploratory study, whole blood transcriptomes of 68 treatment-naïve early RA patients were analyzed before initiating MTX. Subgroups were defined by serologic and genetic markers. Response related signatures were interpreted using reference transcriptomes of various cell types, cytokine stimulated conditions and bone marrow precursors. HLA-DRB4-negative patients exhibited most distinctive transcriptional differences. Preponderance of transcripts associated with phagocytes and bone marrow activation indicated response and transcripts of T- and B-lymphocytes non-response. HLA-DRB4-positive patients were more heterogeneous, but also linked failure to increased adaptive immune response. RT-qPCR confirmed reliable candidate selection and independent samples of responders and non-responders the functional patterning. In summary, genomic stratification identified different molecular pathomechanisms in early RA and preponderance of innate but not adaptive immune activation suggested response to MTX therapy.
Journal: Clinical Immunology - Volume 171, October 2016, Pages 50-61