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Discovery and Characterization of Genetic Risk Loci in Sjogren's Syndrome


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ABSTRACT Sj?gren?s syndrome (SS) is a complex rheumatic disorder distinguished by autoimmune targeting of exocrine glands. Severe clinical manifestations may include debilitating dryness, pulmonary dysfunction, neuropathies, profound fatigue, and lymphoma. Salivary gland lesions involve activated ductal and acinar epithelial cells as well as irreversible immune-mediated tissue damage. Diagnosis and treatment of SS are notoriously difficult. Our group leads the international Sj?gren?s Genetics Network (SGENE) comprised of 26 SS research groups dedicated to understanding the genetic architecture of SS. SGENE studies have identified 15 of the 16 SS risk loci thus far established in European-derived populations. SS risk loci coalesce in Type I and Type II interferon (IFN), NFkB signaling, antigen presentation, autoantibody production and lymphocyte trafficking pathways. Our genetic studies have provided strong evidence supporting a pathogenic role in SS from various innate and adaptive immune cell subsets, however, how these cell types are functionally affected by SS risk alleles remain poorly understood. Importantly, these studies also suggest new therapeutic targets, such as IL12 signaling, for which biologic therapies have been developed for related autoimmune diseases, but not previously considered in SS. Preliminary data in 2,809 SS cases suggest >40 additional candidate loci that warrant further study. Using insights from our genetic studies, we have developed a novel model of disease pathogenesis that differentiates 3 major patient subsets based on distinct molecular mechanisms. Our overall goals are to develop a more complete model of SS genetic determinants and to identify biomarkers that reflect the distinct molecular mechanisms represented in our disease model that could be developed into clinical tools for stratifying patients. In Aim 1, we will greatly expand our current genome-wide association studies by leveraging our unique access to samples, laboratory and clinical data from well-characterized SGENE cohorts (>10,000 SS cases). In Aim 2, we will test known SS risk variants for cell specific cis-regulatory effects on transcription in salivary gland tissues. Banked tissues obtained from minor labial gland biopsies from subjects (n=200) classified into the 3 major patient subsets defined in our proposed disease model, plus a subset of patients with lymphoma and controls will be evaluated. Spatial transcriptomic technologies will be utilized to generate gene expression data in which morphological context is retained at nearly single cell resolution. In Aim 3, we will integrate genetic, transcriptomic and proteomic data to develop multidimensional panels of soluble immune mediators that can serve as peripheral biomarkers for these patient subgroups to facilitate patient stratification. These studies will expand our understanding of genetic contributors to SS, identify cell-specific functional effects on transcription, foster development of new clinical tools for more accurate diagnostics, and establish the feasibility of rapid clinical translation for therapeutic targeting in well-defined patient subsets using novel and existing biologics directed against pathways and cell types that drive this complex autoimmune disorder. !
Collapse sponsor award id
R01AR073855

Collapse Time 
Collapse start date
2020-09-07
Collapse end date
2025-08-31