Abstract

Both a lack of biomarkers and relatively ineffective treatments constitute impediments to management of lupus nephritis (LN). Here we used gene expression microarrays to contrast the transcriptomic profiles of active SLE patients with and without LN to identify potential biomarkers for this condition. RNA isolated from whole peripheral blood of active SLE patients was used for transcriptomic profiling and the data analyzed by linear modeling, with corrections for multiple testing. Results were validated in a second cohort of SLE patients, using NanoString technology. The majority of genes demonstrating altered transcript abundance between patients with and without LN were neutrophil-related. Findings in the validation cohort confirmed this observation and showed that levels of RNA abundance in renal remission were similar to active patients without LN. In secondary analyses, RNA abundance correlated with disease activity, hematuria and proteinuria, but not renal biopsy changes. As abundance levels of the individual transcripts correlated strongly with each other, a composite neutrophil score was generated by summing all levels before examining additional correlations. There was a modest correlation between the neutrophil score and the blood neutrophil count, which was largely driven by the dose of glucocorticosteroids and not the proportion of low density and/or activated neutrophils. Analysis of longitudinal data revealed no correlation between baseline neutrophil score or changes over the first year of follow-up with subsequent renal flare or treatment outcomes, respectively. The findings argue that although the neutrophil score is associated with LN, its clinical utility as a biomarker may be limited.

Highlights

  • Nephritis is a frequent disease manifestation in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE), affecting ~50–60% of patients

  • In this study we found that the majority of genes that are expressed at significantly higher levels in active Lupus nephritis (LN) patients as compared to those without active LN are neutrophil-related genes

  • The presence of a neutrophil-derived signature in SLE was initially thought to be due to aberrant localization of a subset of neutrophils (LDGs) with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) on a Ficoll gradient [7], more recently this signature has been observed in the whole peripheral blood of both pediatric and adult SLE patients [8, 9]

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Summary

Introduction

Nephritis is a frequent disease manifestation in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE), affecting ~50–60% of patients. Lupus nephritis (LN) typically has a relapsing and remitting course, culminating in significant renal impairment in ~30% of patients and end-stage kidney disease in ~15% of patients [1,2,3]. This disease course poses significant difficulties for the treating clinician, who must balance the need to prevent renal damage with the complications of long term treatment with glucocorticosteroids (GCS) and immunosuppressives. One of the impediments to this management approach is the lack of biomarkers forecasting development of LN or reflecting response to therapy [5]

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