Changes in DNA methylation are associated with systemic lupus erythematosus flare remission and clinical subtypes

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) has numerous symptoms across organs and an unpredictable flare-remittance pattern. This has made it challenging to understand drivers of long-term SLE outcomes. Our objective was to identify whether changes in DNA methylation over time, in an actively flaring SLE c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical epigenetics 2024-12, Vol.16 (1), p.181-14, Article 181
Hauptverfasser: Horton, Mary K, Nititham, Joanne, Taylor, Kimberly E, Katz, Patricia, Ye, Chun Jimmie, Yazdany, Jinoos, Dall'Era, Maria, Hurabielle, Charlotte, Barcellos, Lisa F, Criswell, Lindsey A, Lanata, Cristina M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) has numerous symptoms across organs and an unpredictable flare-remittance pattern. This has made it challenging to understand drivers of long-term SLE outcomes. Our objective was to identify whether changes in DNA methylation over time, in an actively flaring SLE cohort, were associated with remission and whether these changes meaningfully subtype SLE patients. Fifty-nine multi-ethnic SLE patients had clinical visits and DNA methylation profiles at a flare and approximately 3 months later. Methylation was measured using the Illumina EPIC array. We identified sites where methylation change between visits was associated with remission at the follow-up visit using limma package and a time x remission interaction term. Models adjusted for batch, age at diagnosis, time between visits, age at flare, sex, medications, and cell-type proportions. Separately, a paired T-test identified Bonferroni significant methylation sites with ≥ 3% change between visits (n = 546). Methylation changes at these sites were used for unsupervised consensus hierarchical clustering. Associations between clusters and patient features were assessed. Nineteen patients fully remitted at the follow-up visit. For 1,953 CpG sites, methylation changed differently for remitters vs. non-remitters (Bonferroni p 
ISSN:1868-7083
1868-7075
1868-7083
DOI:10.1186/s13148-024-01792-x