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Lung tissue gene-expression signature for the ageing lung in COPD

Authors :
Roy R Woldhuis
Don D. Sin
Yohan Bossé
Corry-Anke Brandsma
Wim Timens
Tristan V. de Jong
Maarten van den Berge
Victor Guryev
David C. Nickle
Alen Faiz
Dirkje S. Postma
Maaike de Vries
Groningen Research Institute for Asthma and COPD (GRIAC)
Stem Cell Aging Leukemia and Lymphoma (SALL)
Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS)
Source :
Thorax, 73(7), 609-617. BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP, 2018.

Abstract

IntroductionCOPD is a chronic, progressive, inflammatory disease of the lungs and the third leading cause of death worldwide. The current knowledge of the pathophysiology of COPD is limited and novel insights in underlying disease mechanisms are urgently needed. Since there are clear parallels between ageing and COPD, we investigated genes underlying lung ageing in general and abnormal lung ageing in COPD.MethodsWhole genome mRNA profiling was performed on lung tissue samples (n=1197) and differential gene expression with increasing age was analysed using an adjusted linear regression model. Subsequent pathway analysis was performed using GeneNetwork and the gene-expression signature was compared with lung ageing in the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project. In a subset of patients with COPD (n=311) and non-COPD controls (n=270), we performed an interaction analysis between age and COPD to identify genes differentially expressed with age in COPD compared with controls, followed by gene set enrichment pathway analysis.ResultsWe identified a strong gene-expression signature for lung ageing with 3509 differentially expressed genes, of which 33.5% were found nominal significant in the GTEx project. Interestingly, we foundEDA2Ras a strong candidate gene for lung ageing. The age*COPD interaction analysis revealed 69 genes significantly differentially expressed with age between COPD and controls.ConclusionsOur study indicates that processes related to lung development, cell-cell contacts, calcium signalling and immune responses are involved in lung ageing in general. Pathways related to extracellular matrix, mammalian target of rapamycin signalling, splicing of introns and exons and the ribosome complex are proposed to be involved in abnormal lung ageing in COPD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14683296 and 00406376
Volume :
73
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Thorax
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3f92dc00160cf9ca444b1bff550148c3