Publication: Inflammatory and oncogenic gene signatures in chronic hepatitis delta infection
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KU Authors
Co-Authors
Khanam, Arshi
Ameer, Abutaleb
Kaysin, Furkan
Yurdaydin, Cihan
Kottilil, Shyamasundaran
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No
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Abstract
Background and aims: Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) causes the most
severe form of chronic viral hepatitis due to rapid progression
towards end-stage liver disease including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Factors driving disease acceleration need to be
investigated to prevent advanced disease progression. We aimed to
identify molecular signatures predicting the rapid onset of severe
hepatic ailment in chronic HDV infection.
Method: We investigated peripheral blood transcriptomic profiles in
chronic HBV and HDV coinfected (CHB/CHD-coinfection) patients
and compared with CHB-monoinfection matched for liver fibrosis to
recognize gene signatures associated with CHD-induced disease
progression. Multiplex cytokine bead array and flow cytometry assays
were performed to validate RNAseq and examine the markers of
inflammation, fibrosis and immune exhaustion.
Results: Transcriptomic profile revealed significant upregulation of
genes related to inflammation, oncogenesis, tumor growth, invasion,
metastasis and inhibition of anti-tumor response such as CXCL2, 3, 8,
TNFSF9, IFITM1, IL-17, IGHA2, AREG, SEMA3F, CSF1R, TREML4,
ANGPTL4 and LILRB2 in CHB/CHD-coinfection than CHB-monoinfection. Interestingly, none of CHB/CHD-coinfected patients we analyzed
had cirrhosis or HCC, yet these patients experienced significant
elevation of inflammatory and oncogenic genes, indicating HDV
triggers these genes much before the onset of cirrhosis or HCC that
contributes to rapid disease acceleration towards end-stage disease.
Analysis of the top canonical pathways further confirmed the
association of these differentially expressed genes in severe inflammatory response and oncogenic process. ELISA further confirmed
induction of inflammatory and fibrogenic cytokines (IL-17, CXCL2,
CXCL13 and TGF-β) in the plasma of CHB/CHD-coinfection.
Additionally, these patients experienced severe immune exhaustion
in effector T cell (CD4 and CD8) compartment by displaying higher
inhibitory receptors PD-1 and TIGIT, which then resulted in poor
antiviral response in terms of IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, perforin and
granzyme B secretion along with impaired polyfunctional responses
against HBV and HDV than CHB-moninfection alone.
Conclusion: HDV coinfection leads to a dichotomous immune
response, whereby suppressing antiviral (HBV and HDV-specific) T
cell immunity, while having an exaggerated inflammatory and
oncogenic responses resulting in accelerated liver disease progression, cirrhosis and HCC.
Source
Publisher
Elsevier
Subject
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Citation
Has Part
Source
Journal of hepatology
