4.5 Article

Shortened Telomere Length in Sputum Cells of Bronchiectasis Patients is Associated with Dysfunctional Inflammatory Pathways

Journal

LUNG
Volume 200, Issue 3, Pages 401-407

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00408-022-00535-0

Keywords

RNA-seq; Respiratory disease; Telomere attrition; Sputum immune cells

Funding

  1. A*STAR CDA Grant [C210112020]
  2. National Medical Research Council, Ministry of Health Clinician-Scientist Individual Research Grant New Investigator Grant [CNIG17nov014]

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This study found that telomere length in sputum of bronchiectasis patients is significantly shortened, and identified the signaling pathways and genes related to telomere shortening.
Telomere attrition is an established ageing biomarker and shorter peripheral blood leukocyte telomere length has been associated with increased risks of respiratory diseases. However, whether telomere length in disease-relevant sputum immune cells of chronic respiratory disease patients is shortened and which pathways are dysfunctional are not clear. Here we measured telomere length from sputum samples of bronchiectasis and asthmatic subjects and determined that telomere length in sputum of bronchiectasis subjects was significantly shorter (Beta = - 1.167, P-Adj = 2.75 x 10(-4)). We further performed global gene expression analysis and identified genes involved in processes such as NLRP3 inflammasome activation and regulation of adaptive immune cells when bronchiectasis sputum telomere length was shortened. Our study provides insights on dysfunctions related to shortened telomere length in sputum immune cells of bronchiectasis patients.

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