Abstract

ObjectiveThis study aims to identify clinically relevant diagnostic biomarkers in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) while exploring how immune cell infiltration contributes towards COPD pathogenesis.MethodsThe GEO database provided two human COPD gene expression datasets (GSE38974 and GSE76925; n=134) along with the relevant controls (n=49) for differentially expressed gene (DEG) analyses. Candidate biomarkers were identified using the support vector machine recursive feature elimination (SVM-RFE) analysis and the LASSO regression model. The discriminatory ability was determined using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) values. These candidate biomarkers were characterized in the GSE106986 dataset (14 COPD patients and 5 controls) in terms of their respective diagnostic values and expression levels. The CIBERSORT program was used to estimate patterns of tissue infiltration of 22 types of immune cells. Furthermore, the in vivo and in vitro model of COPD was established using cigarette smoke extract (CSE) to validated the bioinformatics results.Results80 genes were identified via DEG analysis that were primarily involved in cellular amino acid and metabolic processes, regulation of telomerase activity and phagocytosis, antigen processing and MHC class I-mediated peptide antigen presentation, and other biological processes. LASSO and SVM-RFE were used to further characterize the candidate diagnostic markers for COPD, SLC27A3, and STAU1. SLC27A3 and STAU1 were found to be diagnostic markers of COPD in the metadata cohort (AUC=0.734, AUC=0.745). Their relevance in COPD were validated in the GSE106986 dataset (AUC=0.900 AUC=0.971). Subsequent analysis of immune cell infiltration discovered an association between SLC27A3 and STAU1 with resting NK cells, plasma cells, eosinophils, activated mast cells, memory B cells, CD8+, CD4+, and helper follicular T-cells. The expressions of SLC27A3 and STAU1 were upregulated in COPD models both in vivo and in vitro. Immune infiltration activation was observed in COPD models, accompanied by the enhanced expression of SLC27A3 and STAU1. Whereas, the knockdown of SLC27A3 or STAU1 attenuated the effect of CSE on BEAS-2B cells.ConclusionSTUA1 and SLC27A3 are valuable diagnostic biomarkers of COPD. COPD pathogenesis is heavily influenced by patterns of immune cell infiltration. This study provides a molecular biology insight into COPD occurrence and in exploring new therapeutic means useful in COPD.

Highlights

  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is an extremely common debilitating ailment of the modern world and represents a slowly progressive destructive pulmonary disease that involves chronic inflammation [1]

  • COPD diagnosis and initiation of treatment are clinically important in improving prognosis and overall survival of COPD patients

  • Differentially expressed gene (DEG) were primarily involved with telomerase regulation, cellular amino acid metabolic processes, multicellular organic homeostasis, MHC class I-mediated peptide antigen presentation and antigen processing in addition to various other biological processes (Figure 2A)

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is an extremely common debilitating ailment of the modern world and represents a slowly progressive destructive pulmonary disease that involves chronic inflammation [1]. COPD is currently ranked as the fourth cause of death in the world and is common in both developed and developing countries [2, 3]. COPD diagnosis and initiation of treatment are clinically important in improving prognosis and overall survival of COPD patients. A wide array of imaging modalities such as chest x-rays, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and computed tomography (CT) have further improved COPD diagnosis [4]. Due to sensitivity and specificity limitations, current diagnostic mechanisms are not well suited in detecting early COPD. COPD develops on well-established disease drivers such as genetic factors, a history of smoking, infection, and inflammation, along with an imbalance in protease and antiprotease expression [5]. COPD is a complex and multifactorial entity that arises due to an amalgamation of environmental and genetic influences [6]

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