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A pharmacogenetic study implicates NINJ2 in the response to Interferon-ß in multiple sclerosis

Authors :
Jeannette Lechner-Scott
Clara Guaschino
Philip L. De Jager
Vittorio Martinelli
Tina Roostaei
Sunny Malhotra
José C. Álvarez-Cermeño
Filippo Martinelli-Boneschi
Luciana Midaglia
Federica Esposito
Arcadi Navarro
Laura Ferrè
Ana Maria Osiceanu
Ferdinando Clarelli
Howard L. Weiner
Nino Spataro
Manuel Comabella
Lorena Citterio
Marta Radaelli
Giancarlo Comi
Xavier Montalban
Melissa Sorosina
Luisa M. Villar
Jordi Río
Silvia Peroni
Source :
Multiple Sclerosis Journal, Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Sage Publications, 2020.

Abstract

[Background] Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a disease in which biomarker identification is fundamental to predict response to treatments and to deliver the optimal drug to patients. We previously found an association between rs7298096, a polymorphism upstream to the NINJ2 gene, and the 4-year response to interferon-β (IFNβ) treatment in MS patients.<br />[Objectives] To analyse the association between rs7298096 and time to first relapse (TTFR) during IFNβ therapy in MS patients and to better investigate its functional role. [Methods] Survival analysis was applied in three MS cohorts from different countries (n = 1004). We also studied the role of the polymorphism on gene expression using GTEx portal and a luciferase assay. We interrogated GEO datasets to explore the relationship between NINJ2 expression, IFNβ and TTFR. [Results] Rs7298096AA patients show a shorter TTFR than rs7298096G-carriers (Pmeta-analysis = 3 × 10−4, hazard ratio = 1.41). Moreover, rs7298096AA is associated with a higher NINJ2 expression in blood (p = 7.0 × 10−6), which was confirmed in vitro (p = 0.009). Finally, NINJ2 expression is downregulated by IFNβ treatment and related to TTFR. [Conclusions] Rs7298096 could influence MS disease activity during IFNβ treatment by modulating NINJ2 expression in blood. The gene encodes for an adhesion molecule involved in inflammation and endothelial cells activation, supporting its role in MS.

Details

ISSN :
14770970 and 13524585
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Multiple Sclerosis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41c6e180bfe317f3c8cb9b871b9973bc