4.7 Article

Profound loss of esophageal tissue differentiation in patients with eosinophilic esophagitis

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 140, Issue 3, Pages 738-+

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2016.11.042

Keywords

Eosinophilic esophagitis; IL-1 cytokines; protease activity; IL-13; differentiation; whole-exome sequencing; mutations

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R37 AI045898, R01 AI124355, U19 AI070235, F30 DK109573, T32 GM063483, P30 DK078392]
  2. Campaign Urging Research for Eosinophilic Disease (CURED)
  3. Buckeye Foundation
  4. Sunshine Charitable Foundation
  5. APFED HOPE award
  6. Digestive Health Center Pilot/Feasibility award, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (through an NIDDK) [P30 DK078392]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: A key question in the allergy field is to understand how tissue-specific disease is manifested. Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is an emerging tissue-specific allergic disease with an unclear pathogenesis. Objective: Herein we tested the hypothesis that a defect in tissue-specific esophageal genes is an integral part of EoE pathogenesis. Methods: We interrogated the pattern of expression of esophagus-specific signature genes derived from the Human Protein Atlas in the EoE transcriptome and in EPC2 esophageal epithelial cells. Western blotting and immunofluorescence were used for evaluating expression of esophageal proteins in biopsy specimens from control subjects and patients with active EoE. Whole-exome sequencing was performed to identify mutations in esophagus-specific genes. Results: We found that approximately 39% of the esophagusspecific transcripts were altered in patients with EoE, with approximately 90% being downregulated. The majority of transcriptional changes observed in esophagus-specific genes were reproduced in vitro in esophageal epithelial cells differentiated in the presence of IL-13. Functional enrichment analysis revealed keratinization and differentiation as the most affected biological processes and identified IL-1 cytokines and serine peptidase inhibitors as the most dysregulated esophagus-specific protein families in patients with EoE. Accordingly, biopsy specimens from patients with EoE evidenced a profound loss of tissue differentiation, decreased expression of keratin 4 (KRT4) and cornulin (CRNN), and increased expression of KRT5 and KRT14. Whole-exome sequencing of 33 unrelated patients with EoE revealed 39 rare mutations in 18 esophagus-specific differentially expressed genes. Conclusions: A tissue-centered analysis has revealed a profound loss of esophageal tissue differentiation (identity) as an integral and specific part of the pathophysiology of EoE and implicated protease-and IL-1-related activities as putative central pathways in disease pathogenesis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available