Pediatric Rheumatology Online Journal → July 2003 → Childhood Lupus→ Immunology and Immunogenetics → Abstract #87
TYPE I INTERFERON AND GRANULOPOIESIS SIGNATURES IN PEDIATRIC SYSTEMIC LUPUS ERYTHEMATOSUS BLOOD
V. Pascual,1,2 L. Bennett,1,2 E. Arce,1,2 K. Palucka,2 J. Banchereau.2
1Pediatrics, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX; 2Baylor Institute for Immunology Research, Dallas, TX
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is a prototype systemic autoimmune disease characterized by flares of high morbidity for which we have no predictors. We used oligonucleotide microarrays to analyze the genes expressed by blood mononuclear cells from active SLE patients, arthritis patients and healthy controls. Here we show that active SLE can be distinguished by a remarkably homogeneous gene expression pattern with overexpression of granulopoiesis-related and interferon-induced genes. Using the most stringent statistical analysis (Bonferroni correction), 15 genes were found highly upregulated in SLE patients, 14 of which are either well-known or newly identified targets of IFN. The other gene is the defensin DEFA-3, a major product of immature granulocytes. A more liberal correction to the pairwise tests (Benjamini and Hochberg correction) yielded 18 additional genes, 12 of which are known to be IFN-regulated and 4 granulocyte-specific. High dose i.v. infusion of glucocorticoids, one of the standard treatments of disease flares, shuts down the interferon signature, further supporting the critical role of this cytokine in SLE. Furthermore, we have identified a set of 10 genes whose expression correlated with disease activity according to the SLEDAI. The most striking correlation (p