AI Article Synopsis

  • Crohn's disease arises from an imbalanced inflammatory response to gut microbes, often leading to a poor response to anti-TNF treatments like adalimumab.
  • The study aimed to understand the variations in treatment response by analyzing RNA from colon tissue and DNA from blood of Slovenian patients who had not previously received adalimumab.
  • Researchers pinpointed nine genes with specific transcripts linked to how patients respond to adalimumab, identifying new genetic factors that may influence the effectiveness of treatment for Crohn's disease.

Article Abstract

Crohn's disease is a consequence of dysregulated inflammatory response to the host's microbiota. Although anti-TNF treatment improves the quality of the patient's life, a large proportion of patients lose response to the treatment. The past decade of research has led to a continuum of studies showcasing the heterogeneity of anti-TNF response; thus, the aim of the present study was to dissect transcriptome-wide findings to transcript isoform specific levels and combine the analyses with refined information of immune cell landscapes in colon tissue, and subsequently select promising candidates using gene ontology and genomic integration. We enrolled Slovenian Crohn's disease patients who were naïve with respect to adalimumab treatment. We performed colon tissue RNA sequencing and peripheral blood mononuclear cell DNA genotyping with a subsequent contemporary integrative approach to combine immune cell deconvoluted isoform transcript specific transcriptome analysis, gene ontology layering and genomic data. We identified nine genes (, , , , , , , , ) with 15 transcripts and 16 variants involved in the adalimumab response. Our study identified loci, some of which were previously shown to contribute to inflammatory bowel disease susceptibility, as novel loci involved in adalimumab response in Crohn's disease patients.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9500628PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14091893DOI Listing

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