A 380-gene meta-signature of active tuberculosis compared with healthy controls

Mycobacterium tuberculosis is estimated to have infected one third of the world's population and continues to be a significant cause of mortality and morbidity [1]. There is a need for new and improved diagnostics or treatment-monitoring tools and blood-based mRNA diagnostics are a potential so...

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Veröffentlicht in:The European respiratory journal 2016-06, Vol.47 (6), p.1873-1876
Hauptverfasser: Blankley, Simon, Graham, Christine M, Levin, Joe, Turner, Jacob, Berry, Matthew P R, Bloom, Chloe I, Xu, Zhaohui, Pascual, Virgina, Banchereau, Jacques, Chaussabel, Damien, Breen, Ronan, Santis, George, Blankenship, Derek M, Lipman, Marc, O'Garra, Anne
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container_end_page 1876
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1873
container_title The European respiratory journal
container_volume 47
creator Blankley, Simon
Graham, Christine M
Levin, Joe
Turner, Jacob
Berry, Matthew P R
Bloom, Chloe I
Xu, Zhaohui
Pascual, Virgina
Banchereau, Jacques
Chaussabel, Damien
Breen, Ronan
Santis, George
Blankenship, Derek M
Lipman, Marc
O'Garra, Anne
description Mycobacterium tuberculosis is estimated to have infected one third of the world's population and continues to be a significant cause of mortality and morbidity [1]. There is a need for new and improved diagnostics or treatment-monitoring tools and blood-based mRNA diagnostics are a potential solution [2]. Gene expression microarray analysis of human blood has been widely used to profile the host transcriptional response in active tuberculosis (TB) to identify potential biomarkers and better understand the host immune response [2]. So far, there has been a relative lack of concordance in the actual genes being identified from the published studies [2, 3], although there has been agreement in some of the pathways identified. Interferon (IFN) signalling has been identified as a dominant signature in many of the individual studies [2, 4]; however, when significant gene lists were combined from eight publicly available TB datasets, TREM1 (triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 1) signalling became the most significant pathway [5].
doi_str_mv 10.1183/13993003.02121-2015
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Gene Expression Profiling
Host-Pathogen Interactions - genetics
Host-Pathogen Interactions - immunology
Humans
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Signal Transduction - genetics
Transcriptome
Tuberculosis - genetics
Tuberculosis - immunology
title A 380-gene meta-signature of active tuberculosis compared with healthy controls
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