Mucosal Transcriptomics Implicates Under Expression of BRINP3 in the Pathogenesis of Ulcerative Colitis

PJ Smith, AP Levine, J Dunne… - Inflammatory bowel …, 2014 - academic.oup.com
PJ Smith, AP Levine, J Dunne, P Guilhamon, M Turmaine, GW Sewell, NR O'Shea, R Vega…
Inflammatory bowel diseases, 2014academic.oup.com
Background Mucosal abnormalities are potentially important in the primary pathogenesis of
ulcerative colitis (UC). We investigated the mucosal transcriptomic expression profiles of
biopsies from patients with UC and healthy controls, taken from macroscopically
noninflamed tissue from the terminal ileum and 3 colonic locations with the objective of
identifying abnormal molecules that might be involved in disease development. Methods
Whole-genome transcriptional analysis was performed on intestinal biopsies taken from 24 …
Background
Mucosal abnormalities are potentially important in the primary pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis (UC). We investigated the mucosal transcriptomic expression profiles of biopsies from patients with UC and healthy controls, taken from macroscopically noninflamed tissue from the terminal ileum and 3 colonic locations with the objective of identifying abnormal molecules that might be involved in disease development.
Methods
Whole-genome transcriptional analysis was performed on intestinal biopsies taken from 24 patients with UC, 26 healthy controls, and 14 patients with Crohn's disease. Differential gene expression analysis was performed at each tissue location separately, and results were then meta-analyzed. Significantly, differentially expressed genes were validated using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. The location of gene expression within the colon was determined using immunohistochemistry, subcellular fractionation, electron and confocal microscopy. DNA methylation was quantified by pyrosequencing.
Results
Only 4 probes were abnormally expressed throughout the colon in patients with UC with Bone morphogenetic protein/Retinoic acid Inducible Neural-specific 3 (BRINP3) being the most significantly underexpressed. Attenuated expression of BRINP3 in UC was independent of current inflammation, unrelated to phenotype or treatment, and remained low at rebiopsy an average of 22 months later. BRINP3 is localized to the brush border of the colonic epithelium and expression is influenced by DNA methylation within its promoter.
Conclusions
Genome-wide expression analysis of noninflamed mucosal biopsies from patients with UC identified BRINP3 as significantly underexpressed throughout the colon in a large subset of patients with UC. Low levels of this gene could predispose or contribute to the maintenance of the characteristic mucosal inflammation seen in this condition.
Oxford University Press