4.8 Article

Transcription and DNA Methylation Patterns of Blood-Derived CD8+ T Cells Are Associated With Age and Inflammatory Bowel Disease But Do Not Predict Prognosis

Journal

GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 160, Issue 1, Pages 232-+

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2020.08.017

Keywords

Epigenetic; Prognosis; Biomarker; Validation

Funding

  1. Broad Medical Research Program at Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of America
  2. Isaac Newton Trust/Wellcome Trust ISSF
  3. University of Cambridge Joint Research Grant Scheme
  4. Cambridge Biomedical Research Campus pump priming grant
  5. Action Medical Research UK
  6. Crohn's in Childhood Research Association charity
  7. European Society for Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition
  8. IG-IBD International Exchange Program
  9. European Molecular Biology Laboratory
  10. UK Medical Research Council (Epigenetics and Evolution)
  11. MRC [MC_PC_17230] Funding Source: UKRI

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The study aimed to validate the correlation between CD8(+) T-cell gene expression and disease outcome in IBD patients, but failed to reproduce the previously reported findings. It highlights the challenges of developing prognostic biomarkers for IBD patients and stresses the importance of validation in large, independent cohorts before clinical application.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Gene expression patterns of CD8(+) T cells have been reported to correlate with clinical outcomes of adults with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). We aimed to validate these findings in independent patient cohorts. METHODS: We obtained peripheral blood samples from 112 children with a new diagnosis of IBD (71 with Crohn's disease and 41 with ulcerative colitis) and 19 children without IBD (controls) and recorded medical information on disease activity and outcomes. CD8(+) T cells were isolated from blood samples by magnetic bead sorting at the point of diagnosis and during the course of disease. Genome-wide transcription (n = 192) and DNA methylation (n = 66) profiles were generated using Affymetrix and Illumina arrays, respectively. Publicly available transcriptomes and DNA methylomes of CD8(+) T cells from 3 adult patient cohorts with and without IBD were included in data analyses. RESULTS: Previously reported CD8(+) T-cell prognostic expression and exhaustion signatures were only found in the original adult IBD patient cohort. These signatures could not be detected in either a pediatric or a second adult IBD cohort. In contrast, an association between CD8(+) T-cell gene expression with age and sex was detected across all 3 cohorts. CD8(+) gene transcription was clearly associated with IBD in the 2 cohorts that included non-IBD controls. Lastly, DNA methylation profiles of CD8(+) T cells from children with Crohn's disease correlated with age but not with disease outcome. CONCLUSIONS: We were unable to validate previously reported findings of an association between CD8(+) T-cell gene transcription and disease outcome in IBD. Our findings reveal the challenges of developing prognostic biomarkers for patients with IBD and the importance of their validation in large, independent cohorts before clinical application.

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