Multi-omics analysis in inclusion body myositis identifies mir-16 responsible for HLA overexpression

Daphne Wijnbergen*, Mridul Johari, Ozan Ozisik, Peter A. C. 't Hoen, Friederike Ehrhart, Anais Baudot, Chris T. Evelo, Bjarne Udd, Marco Roos, Eleni Mina

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

BackgroundInclusion Body Myositis is an acquired muscle disease. Its pathogenesis is unclear due to the co-existence of inflammation, muscle degeneration and mitochondrial dysfunction. We aimed to provide a more advanced understanding of the disease by combining multi-omics analysis with prior knowledge. We applied molecular subnetwork identification to find highly interconnected subnetworks with a high degree of change in Inclusion Body Myositis. These could be used as hypotheses for potential pathomechanisms and biomarkers that are implicated in this disease.ResultsOur multi-omics analysis resulted in five subnetworks that exhibit changes in multiple omics layers. These subnetworks are related to antigen processing and presentation, chemokine-mediated signaling, immune response-signal transduction, rRNA processing, and mRNA splicing. An interesting finding is that the antigen processing and presentation subnetwork links the underexpressed miR-16-5p to overexpressed HLA genes by negative expression correlation. In addition, the rRNA processing subnetwork contains the RPS18 gene, which is not differentially expressed, but has significant variant association. The RPS18 gene could potentially play a role in the underexpression of the genes involved in 18 S ribosomal RNA processing, which it is highly connected to.ConclusionsOur analysis highlights the importance of interrogating multiple omics to enhance knowledge discovery in rare diseases. We report five subnetworks that can provide additional insights into the molecular pathogenesis of Inclusion Body Myositis. Our analytical workflow can be reused as a method to study disease mechanisms involved in other diseases when multiple omics datasets are available.
Original languageEnglish
Article number27
Number of pages10
JournalOrphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Volume20
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Inclusion body myositis
  • Multi-omics
  • Transcriptomics
  • Genomics
  • Network analysis
  • Active subnetwork identification
  • Rare diseases
  • Data integration
  • Multiplex network
  • RIBOSOMAL-RNA
  • PROTEIN
  • ASSOCIATION
  • PATHOMECHANISMS
  • TRANSCRIPTION
  • SUBUNIT

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