open access publication

Article, 2017

Relation between NOD2 genotype and changes in innate signaling in Crohn’s disease on mRNA and miRNA levels

npj Genomic Medicine, ISSN 2056-7944, Volume 2, 1, Page 3, 10.1038/s41525-016-0001-4

Contributors

Chen, Yun [1] Salem, Mohammad 0000-0003-3214-3711 [2] Boyd, Mette [1] Bornholdt, Jette [1] Li, Yuan [2] Coskun, Mehmet 0000-0003-1587-5291 [1] [2] Seidelin, Jakob Benedict 0000-0003-3230-7966 (Corresponding author) [2] Sandelin, Albin 0000-0002-7109-7378 (Corresponding author) [1] Nielsen, Ole Haagen 0000-0003-4612-8635 (Corresponding author) [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Herlev Hospital
  4. [NORA names: Capital Region of Denmark; Hospital; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Crohn’s disease is associated with an altered innate immune response of pathogenic importance. This altered response can be associated to loss-of-function polymorphisms in the NOD2 (nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-containing protein 2) gene, but also changes in transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulatory layers, including microRNA activity. Here, we characterized the link between NOD2 genotype and inflammatory-mediated changes in innate signaling by studying transcriptional and post-transcriptional activity in response to NOD2-agonist muramyl dipeptide in monocytes from healthy controls, and Crohn’s disease patients with and without NOD2 loss-of-function polymorphisms. We measured the expression of genes and microRNAs in monocytes from these subjects after stimulation with muramyl dipeptide. Gene expression profiles mainly distinguished the actual muramyl dipeptide response, but not the genotype. A hyper-responsive phenotype was found in Crohn’s disease patients without NOD2 mutations, characterized by upregulated cytokine receptors and general downregulation of microRNA expression. Conversely, microRNA expression could identify genotype-specific differences between subject groups but exhibited little change upon muramyl dipeptide treatment. Only two microRNAs showed muramyl dipeptide-induced response, including miR-155, which was found to regulate multiple genes and whose host gene was one of the highest muramyl dipeptide responders. miR-155 was upregulated in Crohn’s disease patients with NOD2 mutations following lipopolysaccharide and Escherichia coli treatment, but the upregulation was substantially reduced upon muramyl dipeptide treatment. While Crohn’s disease patients with NOD2 mutations on average showed a reduced muramyl dipeptide response, the cohort exhibited large individual variance: a small subset had inflammatory responses almost comparable to wild-type patients on both gene and miR-155 regulatory levels.

Keywords

Crohn, Crohn's disease, Crohn's disease patients, NOD2, NOD2 agonist muramyl dipeptide, NOD2 genotype, NOD2 mutations, activity, average, changes, cohort, control, cytokine receptors, differences, dipeptide, disease, disease patients, downregulation, expression, expression of genes, expression profiles, gene expression profiles, genes, genotype-specific differences, genotypes, group, healthy controls, host, host genes, hyper-responsive phenotype, importance, individual variance, inflammatory-mediated changes, innate immune response, innate signals, layer, levels, lipopolysaccharide, loss-of-function polymorphisms, mRNA, miR-155, miRNAs, microRNA activity, microRNA expression, microRNAs, monocytes, multiple genes, muramyl dipeptide, muramyl dipeptide treatment, mutations, pathogenic importance, patients, phenotype, polymorphism, post-transcriptional activation, post-transcriptional regulatory layer, profile, receptors, regulate multiple genes, regulatory layer, regulatory level, relations, respondents, response, signal, stimulation, subject groups, subjects, treatment, upregulation, variance, wild-type patients

Funders

  • Danish Agency for Science and Higher Education
  • Lundbeck Foundation
  • Novo Nordisk Foundation

Data Provider: Digital Science