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A systems genomics approach to uncover patient-specific pathogenic pathways and proteins in ulcerative colitis

  • Johanne Brooks-Warburton
  • , Dezso Modos
  • , Padhamand Sudhakar
  • , Matthew Madgwick
  • , John Thomas
  • , Balazs Bohar
  • , Azedine Zoufir
  • , Orsolya Kapuy
  • , Mate Szalay-Beko
  • , Bram Verstockt
  • , Lindsay Hall
  • , Alastair Watson
  • , Mark Tremelling
  • , Miles Parkes
  • , Severine Vermeire
  • , Andreas Bender
  • , Simon Carding
  • , Tamas Korcsmaros

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    21 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    We describe a precision medicine workflow, the integrated single nucleotide polymorphism network platform (iSNP), designed to determine the mechanisms by which SNPs affect cellular regulatory networks, and how SNP co-occurrences contribute to disease pathogenesis in ulcerative colitis (UC). Using SNP profiles of 378 UC patients we map the regulatory effects of the SNPs to a human signalling network containing protein-protein, miRNA-mRNA and transcription factor binding interactions. With unsupervised clustering algorithms we group these patient-specific networks into four distinct clusters driven by PRKCB, HLA, SNAI1/CEBPB/PTPN1 and VEGFA/XPO5/POLH hubs. The pathway analysis identifies calcium homeostasis, wound healing and cell motility as key processes in UC pathogenesis. Using transcriptomic data from an independent patient cohort, with three complementary validation approaches focusing on the SNP-affected genes, the patient specific modules and affected functions, we confirm the regulatory impact of non-coding SNPs. iSNP identified regulatory effects for disease-associated non-coding SNPs, and by predicting the patient-specific pathogenic processes, we propose a systems-level way to stratify patients.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalNature Communications
    Volume13
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 28 Apr 2022

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