Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) play an important role in the inflammation that accompanies intracranial aneurysm (IA) pathophysiology. We hypothesized that PBMCs have different transcriptional profiles in patients harboring IAs as compared to IA-free controls, which could be the basis for potential blood-based biomarkers for the disease. To test this, we isolated PBMC RNA from whole blood of 52 subjects (24 with IA, 28 without) and performed next-generation RNA sequencing to obtain their transcriptomes. In a randomly assigned discovery cohort of n = 39 patients, we performed differential expression analysis to define an IA-associated signature of 54 genes (q < 0.05 and an absolute fold-change ≥ 1.3). In the withheld validation dataset, these genes could delineate patients with IAs from controls, as the majority of them still had the same direction of expression difference. Bioinformatics analyses by gene ontology enrichment analysis and Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) demonstrated enrichment of structural regulation processes, intracellular signaling function, regulation of ion transport, and cell adhesion. IPA analysis showed that these processes were likely coordinated through NF-kB, cytokine signaling, growth factors, and TNF activity. Correlation analysis with aneurysm size and risk assessment metrics showed that 4/54 genes were associated with rupture risk. These findings highlight the potential to develop predictive biomarkers from PBMCs to identify patients harboring IAs.
Background Genome-wide association studies have identified many single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with increased risk for intracranial aneurysm (IA). However, how such variants affect gene expression within IA is poorly understood. We used publicly-available ChIP-Seq data to study chromatin landscapes surrounding risk loci to determine whether IA-associated SNPs affect functional elements that regulate gene expression in cell types comprising IA tissue. Methods We mapped 16 significant IA-associated SNPs to linkage disequilibrium (LD) blocks within human genome. Using ChIP-Seq data, we examined these regions for presence of H3K4me1, H3K27ac, and H3K9ac histone marks (typically associated with latent/active enhancers). This analysis was conducted in several cell types that are present in IA tissue (endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts, macrophages, monocytes, neutrophils, T cells, B cells, NK cells). In cell types with significant histone enrichment, we used HiC data to investigate topologically associated domains (TADs) encompassing the LD blocks to identify genes that may be affected by IA-associated variants. Bioinformatics were performed to determine the biological significance of these genes. Genes within HiC-defined TADs were also compared to differentially expressed genes from RNA-seq/microarray studies of IA tissues. Results We found that endothelial cells and fibroblasts, rather than smooth muscle or immune cells, have significant enrichment for enhancer marks on IA risk haplotypes (p < 0.05). Bioinformatics demonstrated that genes within TADs subsuming these regions are associated with structural extracellular matrix components and enzymatic activity. The majority of histone marked TADs (83% fibroblasts [IMR90], 77% HUVEC) encompassed at least one differentially expressed gene from IA tissue studies. Conclusions These findings provide evidence that genetic variants associated with IA risk act on endothelial cells and fibroblasts. There is strong circumstantial evidence that this may be mediated through altered enhancer function, as genes in TADs encompassing enhancer marks have also been shown to be differentially expressed in IA tissue. These genes are largely related to organization and regulation of the extracellular matrix. This study builds upon our previous (Poppenberg et al., BMC Med Genomics, 2019) by including a more diverse set of data from additional cell types and by identifying potential affected genes (i.e. those in TADs).
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