OP-1 Conjunctival genetic ‘fingerprinting’ in ocular mucous membrane pemphigoid

*Correspondence, Jesse Panthagani: j.panthagani@bham.ac.ukObjectiveOcular Mucous Membrane Pemphigoid (OcMMP) is a rare disease characterised by chronic autoimmune-driven conjunctival inflammation leading to progressive scarring, and blinding sequelae. The purpose of this study was to characterise th...

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Published inBMJ open ophthalmology Vol. 7; no. Suppl 1; p. A1
Main Authors Panthagani, Jesse, Vincent, Rachel, Sekaran, Anisha, Pujara, Priyanka, Wallace, Graham R, Rauz, Saaeha
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London BMJ Publishing Group Ltd 01.05.2022
BMJ Publishing Group LTD
BMJ Publishing Group
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Summary:*Correspondence, Jesse Panthagani: j.panthagani@bham.ac.ukObjectiveOcular Mucous Membrane Pemphigoid (OcMMP) is a rare disease characterised by chronic autoimmune-driven conjunctival inflammation leading to progressive scarring, and blinding sequelae. The purpose of this study was to characterise the conjunctival gene ‘fingerprint’ involved in the fibrosis signalling pathways in the pathogenesis of OcMMP.Methods and AnalysisOcular surface gene expression studies were undertaken on conjunctival swabs from OcMMP and age-matched control patients. The NanoString nCounter Human Fibrosis panel (NanoString Technologies Inc.) quantified RNA expression from 770 genes. Differentially expressed genes (DEG) and pathway analysis were determined using HyperScale architecture designed by ROSALIND, Inc. with normalisation, fold changes (≥+1.5-fold or ≤-1.5-fold) and p-values adjustment (<0.05) using the Benjamini-Hochberg method. Significantly identified genes were aligned to the aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH)/retinoic acid fibroblast autoregulation conjunctival scarring signalling pathway, known to be central to immune-mediated mucosal scarring in OcMMP.Results6 OcMMP patients (8 eyes, mean age 76.5 (±7.0 SD) years, 6 (66%) male, 3 (50%) biopsy-positive) and 8 age-matched cataract patients (15 eyes; age 73.1 (±9.3) years, 3 (37%) male), serving as controls were analysed. Ninety-three DEGs were observed between OcMMP and controls (48 upregulated and 45 downregulated). Of these, the top 10 upregulated DEGs were COL3A1, COL1A1, FN1, TPSAB1/B2, THBS1, SERPINE1, SPP1, COL5A1, OASL and IL1B. 44 pathways that had a global significance score greater or equal to 2, the most significant representing extracellular matrix (ECM) remodelling, synthesis, and degradation.ConclusionThe conjunctival genetic ‘fingerprint’ predominantly suggests an activated fibroblastic phenotype in the OcMMP patients and could represent (i) novel targets for drug discovery and (ii) surrogate outcomes/novel biomarkers for the monitoring of disease progression.
Bibliography:Oral abstract presentation
2022 Proceedings of the Bowman Club Meeting, 25th March
ISSN:2397-3269
2397-3269
DOI:10.1136/bmjophth-2022-BCM.1