Abstract

Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous disease of unknown etiology. Hypergammaglobulinemia and the presence of autoantibodies in sarcoidosis suggest active humoral immunity to unknown antigen(s). We developed a complex cDNA library derived from tissues of sarcoidosis patients. Using a high throughput method, we constructed a microarray platform from this cDNA library containing large numbers of sarcoidosis clones. After selective biopanning, 1070 sarcoidosis-specifc clones were arrayed and immunoscreend with 152 sera from patients with sarcoidosis and other pulmonary diseases. To identify the sarcoidosis classifiers two statistical approaches were conducted: First, we identified significant biomarkers between sarcoidosis and healthy controls, and second identified markers comparing sarcoidosis to all other groups. At the threshold of an False Discovery Rate (FDR) < 0.01, we identified 14 clones in the first approach and 12 clones in the second approach discriminating sarcoidosis from other groups. We used the classifiers to build a naïve Bayes model on the training-set and validated it on an independent test-set. The first approach yielded an AUC of 0.947 using 14 significant clones with a sensitivity of 0.93 and specificity of 0.88, whereas the AUC of the second option was 0.92 with a sensitivity of 0.96 and specificity of 0.83. These results suggest robust classifier performance. Furthermore, we characterized the informative phage clones by sequencing and homology searches. Large numbers of classifier-clones were peptides involved in cellular trafficking and cytoskeletons. These results show that sarcoidosis is associated with a specific pattern of immunoreactivity that can discriminate it from other diseases.

Highlights

  • Sarcoidosis is a granulomatous disease of unknown etiology [1], yet the unifying environmental or genetic factors as initiators of this disease have not been found [2,3,4,5]

  • Sarcoidosis often coincides with other autoimmune disorders such as lupus erythematosus, vitiligo [9], autoimmune hepatitis, and Crohn’s disease (CD) [9, 12,13,14]

  • Several studies have suggested that the cellular and humoral responses associated with granuloma formation in this disease are the consequence of an exaggerated immune response to unknown antigens [15, 16]

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Summary

Introduction

Sarcoidosis is a granulomatous disease of unknown etiology [1], yet the unifying environmental or genetic factors as initiators of this disease have not been found [2,3,4,5]. Targeted studies evaluating humural immunity in sarcoidosis have shown elevated IgG levels against components of various pathogens (mycobacterium tuberculosis and propionibacterium acne) [19, 20], as well as against several cellular commponents, including vimentin, a commponent intermediate filament protein, and others [21,22,23]. These data suggest the development of humoral responses against various antigens of different origins in this disease that can be profiled as diagnostics or to identify novel antigens contributing in pathogenesis of the disease. We tested the hypothesis that this technology is able to identify the specific classifiers for sarcoidosis in early stages within a large heterogeneous group of study subjects, including, heathy controls, Tuberculosis and lung cancer

Results
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Materials and methods
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