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author Kicic, Anthony
de Jong, E.
Ling, K.M.
Nichol, K.
Anderson, D.
Wark, P.A.B.
Knight, D.A.
Bosco, A.
Stick, S.M.
Kicic-Starcevich, E.
Garratt, L.W.
Padros-Goosen, M.
Tan, E.L.
Sutanto, E.N.
Looi, K.
Hillas, J.
Iosifidis, T.
Shaw, N.C.
Montgomery, S.T.
Martinovich, K.M.
Lannigan, F.J.
Bergesio, R.
Lee, B.
Vijaya-Sekeran, S.
Swan, P.
Heaney, M.
Forsyth, I.
Schoep, T.
Larcombe, Alexander
Hunter, M.
McGee, K.
Millington, N.
Poh, M.W.P.
Laucirica, D.R.
Schofield, C.
McLean, S.
Landwehr, K.
Farrow, N.
Roscioli, E.
Parsons, D.
Grainge, C.
Reid, A.T.
Loo, S.L.
Veerati, P.C.
author_facet Kicic, Anthony
de Jong, E.
Ling, K.M.
Nichol, K.
Anderson, D.
Wark, P.A.B.
Knight, D.A.
Bosco, A.
Stick, S.M.
Kicic-Starcevich, E.
Garratt, L.W.
Padros-Goosen, M.
Tan, E.L.
Sutanto, E.N.
Looi, K.
Hillas, J.
Iosifidis, T.
Shaw, N.C.
Montgomery, S.T.
Martinovich, K.M.
Lannigan, F.J.
Bergesio, R.
Lee, B.
Vijaya-Sekeran, S.
Swan, P.
Heaney, M.
Forsyth, I.
Schoep, T.
Larcombe, Alexander
Hunter, M.
McGee, K.
Millington, N.
Poh, M.W.P.
Laucirica, D.R.
Schofield, C.
McLean, S.
Landwehr, K.
Farrow, N.
Roscioli, E.
Parsons, D.
Grainge, C.
Reid, A.T.
Loo, S.L.
Veerati, P.C.
author_sort Kicic, Anthony
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2020 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology Background: Emerging evidence suggests that disease vulnerability is expressed throughout the airways, the so-called unified airway hypothesis, but the evidence to support this is predominantly indirect. Objectives: We sought to establish the transcriptomic profiles of the upper and lower airways and determine their level of similarity irrespective of airway symptoms (wheeze) and allergy. Methods: We performed RNA sequencing on upper and lower airway epithelial cells from 63 children with or without wheeze and accompanying atopy, using differential gene expression and gene coexpression analyses to determine transcriptional similarity. Results: We observed approximately 91% homology in the expressed genes between the 2 sites. When coexpressed genes were grouped into modules relating to biological functions, all were found to be conserved between the 2 regions, resulting in a consensus network containing 16 modules associated with ribosomal function, metabolism, gene expression, mitochondrial activity, and antiviral responses through IFN activity. Although symptom-associated gene expression changes were more prominent in the lower airway, they were reflected in nasal epithelium and included IL-1 receptor like 1, prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 1, CCL26, and periostin. Through network analysis we identified a cluster of coexpressed genes associated with atopic wheeze in the lower airway, which could equally distinguish atopic and nonatopic phenotypes in upper airway samples. Conclusions: We show that the upper and lower airways are significantly conserved in their transcriptional composition, and that variations associated with disease are present in both nasal and tracheal epithelium. Findings from this study supporting a unified airway imply that clinical insight regarding the lower airway in health and disease can be gained from studying the nasal epithelium.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:15:30Z
publishDate 2020
publisher MOSBY-ELSEVIER
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repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-803152021-01-15T03:41:30Z Assessing the unified airway hypothesis in children via transcriptional profiling of the airway epithelium Kicic, Anthony de Jong, E. Ling, K.M. Nichol, K. Anderson, D. Wark, P.A.B. Knight, D.A. Bosco, A. Stick, S.M. Kicic-Starcevich, E. Garratt, L.W. Padros-Goosen, M. Tan, E.L. Sutanto, E.N. Looi, K. Hillas, J. Iosifidis, T. Shaw, N.C. Montgomery, S.T. Martinovich, K.M. Lannigan, F.J. Bergesio, R. Lee, B. Vijaya-Sekeran, S. Swan, P. Heaney, M. Forsyth, I. Schoep, T. Larcombe, Alexander Hunter, M. McGee, K. Millington, N. Poh, M.W.P. Laucirica, D.R. Schofield, C. McLean, S. Landwehr, K. Farrow, N. Roscioli, E. Parsons, D. Grainge, C. Reid, A.T. Loo, S.L. Veerati, P.C. Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Allergy Immunology Airway epithelium unified airway hypothesis transcriptomics gene expression biological processes ALLERGIC RHINITIS GENE-EXPRESSION ASTHMA NASAL DISEASE CELL BIOLOGY HYPERRESPONSIVENESS INFLAMMATION PERIOSTIN © 2020 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology Background: Emerging evidence suggests that disease vulnerability is expressed throughout the airways, the so-called unified airway hypothesis, but the evidence to support this is predominantly indirect. Objectives: We sought to establish the transcriptomic profiles of the upper and lower airways and determine their level of similarity irrespective of airway symptoms (wheeze) and allergy. Methods: We performed RNA sequencing on upper and lower airway epithelial cells from 63 children with or without wheeze and accompanying atopy, using differential gene expression and gene coexpression analyses to determine transcriptional similarity. Results: We observed approximately 91% homology in the expressed genes between the 2 sites. When coexpressed genes were grouped into modules relating to biological functions, all were found to be conserved between the 2 regions, resulting in a consensus network containing 16 modules associated with ribosomal function, metabolism, gene expression, mitochondrial activity, and antiviral responses through IFN activity. Although symptom-associated gene expression changes were more prominent in the lower airway, they were reflected in nasal epithelium and included IL-1 receptor like 1, prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 1, CCL26, and periostin. Through network analysis we identified a cluster of coexpressed genes associated with atopic wheeze in the lower airway, which could equally distinguish atopic and nonatopic phenotypes in upper airway samples. Conclusions: We show that the upper and lower airways are significantly conserved in their transcriptional composition, and that variations associated with disease are present in both nasal and tracheal epithelium. Findings from this study supporting a unified airway imply that clinical insight regarding the lower airway in health and disease can be gained from studying the nasal epithelium. 2020 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80315 10.1016/j.jaci.2020.02.018 English MOSBY-ELSEVIER restricted
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Allergy
Immunology
Airway epithelium
unified airway hypothesis
transcriptomics
gene expression
biological processes
ALLERGIC RHINITIS
GENE-EXPRESSION
ASTHMA
NASAL
DISEASE
CELL
BIOLOGY
HYPERRESPONSIVENESS
INFLAMMATION
PERIOSTIN
Kicic, Anthony
de Jong, E.
Ling, K.M.
Nichol, K.
Anderson, D.
Wark, P.A.B.
Knight, D.A.
Bosco, A.
Stick, S.M.
Kicic-Starcevich, E.
Garratt, L.W.
Padros-Goosen, M.
Tan, E.L.
Sutanto, E.N.
Looi, K.
Hillas, J.
Iosifidis, T.
Shaw, N.C.
Montgomery, S.T.
Martinovich, K.M.
Lannigan, F.J.
Bergesio, R.
Lee, B.
Vijaya-Sekeran, S.
Swan, P.
Heaney, M.
Forsyth, I.
Schoep, T.
Larcombe, Alexander
Hunter, M.
McGee, K.
Millington, N.
Poh, M.W.P.
Laucirica, D.R.
Schofield, C.
McLean, S.
Landwehr, K.
Farrow, N.
Roscioli, E.
Parsons, D.
Grainge, C.
Reid, A.T.
Loo, S.L.
Veerati, P.C.
Assessing the unified airway hypothesis in children via transcriptional profiling of the airway epithelium
title Assessing the unified airway hypothesis in children via transcriptional profiling of the airway epithelium
title_full Assessing the unified airway hypothesis in children via transcriptional profiling of the airway epithelium
title_fullStr Assessing the unified airway hypothesis in children via transcriptional profiling of the airway epithelium
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the unified airway hypothesis in children via transcriptional profiling of the airway epithelium
title_short Assessing the unified airway hypothesis in children via transcriptional profiling of the airway epithelium
title_sort assessing the unified airway hypothesis in children via transcriptional profiling of the airway epithelium
topic Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Allergy
Immunology
Airway epithelium
unified airway hypothesis
transcriptomics
gene expression
biological processes
ALLERGIC RHINITIS
GENE-EXPRESSION
ASTHMA
NASAL
DISEASE
CELL
BIOLOGY
HYPERRESPONSIVENESS
INFLAMMATION
PERIOSTIN
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80315