AI Article Synopsis

  • - Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a complex autoimmune disease that affects multiple organs, and individuals of African ancestry experience it more severely than those of European ancestry, influenced by genetic factors.
  • - Researchers used a detailed method to identify 1,731 genetic factors contributing to SLE differences between African and European populations by analyzing SNPs and their related genes, highlighting the role of interferons and B cell activity in disease progression.
  • - The study emphasizes the significance of understanding ancestry-specific pathways in SLE, which could lead to better-targeted therapies by revealing potential drug candidates that align with the unique biological mechanisms present in different populations.

Article Abstract

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a multi-organ autoimmune disorder with a prominent genetic component. Individuals of African ancestry (AA) experience the disease more severely and with an increased co-morbidity burden compared to European ancestry (EA) populations. We hypothesize that the disparities in disease prevalence, activity, and response to standard medications between AA and EA populations is partially conferred by genomic influences on biological pathways. To address this, we applied a comprehensive approach to identify all genes predicted from SNP-associated risk loci detected with the Immunochip. By combining genes predicted via eQTL analysis, as well as those predicted from base-pair changes in intergenic enhancer sites, coding-region variants, and SNP-gene proximity, we were able to identify 1,731 potential ancestry-specific and trans-ancestry genetic drivers of SLE. Gene associations were linked to upstream and downstream regulators using connectivity mapping, and predicted biological pathways were mined for candidate drug targets. Examination of trans-ancestral pathways reflect the well-defined role for interferons in SLE and revealed pathways associated with tissue repair and remodeling. EA-dominant genetic drivers were more often associated with innate immune and myeloid cell function pathways, whereas AA-dominant pathways mirror clinical findings in AA subjects, suggesting disease progression is driven by aberrant B cell activity accompanied by ER stress and metabolic dysfunction. Finally, potential ancestry-specific and non-specific drug candidates were identified. The integration of all SLE SNP-predicted genes into functional pathways revealed critical molecular pathways representative of each population, underscoring the influence of ancestry on disease mechanism and also providing key insight for therapeutic selection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7675009PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2020.09.007DOI Listing

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