LIVIVO - The Search Portal for Life Sciences

zur deutschen Oberfläche wechseln
Advanced search

Your last searches

  1. AU="Maria Teresa Viadero"
  2. AU="Wingeter, Márcia A"
  3. AU="Stein, Joshua D"
  4. AU="De Vecchis, Liana"
  5. AU="Chapman, Janet"
  6. AU="Umlai, Umm-Kulthum Ismail"
  7. AU="Reddi, Jyoti M"
  8. AU=Zeissig Sebastian
  9. AU="Valentini, Mariaconsuelo"

Search results

Result 1 - 1 of total 1

Search options

Article ; Online: Epigenetic profiling linked to multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C)

Veronica Davalos / Carlos A. García-Prieto / Gerardo Ferrer / Sergio Aguilera-Albesa / Juan Valencia-Ramos / Agustí Rodríguez-Palmero / Montserrat Ruiz / Laura Planas-Serra / Iolanda Jordan / Iosune Alegría / Patricia Flores-Pérez / Verónica Cantarín / Victoria Fumadó / Maria Teresa Viadero / Carlos Rodrigo / Maria Méndez-Hernández / Eduardo López-Granados / Roger Colobran / Jacques G. Rivière /
Pere Soler-Palacín / Aurora Pujol / Manel Esteller

EClinicalMedicine, Vol 50, Iss , Pp 101515- (2022)

A multicenter, retrospective study

2022  

Abstract: Summary: Background: Most children and adolescents infected with the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) remain asymptomatic or develop a mild coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) that usually does not require medical intervention. ...

Abstract Summary: Background: Most children and adolescents infected with the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) remain asymptomatic or develop a mild coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) that usually does not require medical intervention. However, a small proportion of pediatric patients develop a severe clinical condition, multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C). The involvement of epigenetics in the control of the immune response and viral activity prompted us to carry out an epigenomic study to uncover target loci regulated by DNA methylation that could be altered upon the appearance of MIS-C. Methods: Peripheral blood samples were recruited from 43 confirmed MIS-C patients. 69 non-COVID-19 pediatric samples and 15 COVID-19 pediatric samples without MIS-C were used as controls. The cases in the two groups were mixed and divided into discovery (MIS-C = 29 and non-MIS-C = 56) and validation (MIS-C = 14 and non-MIS-C = 28) cohorts, and balanced for age, gender and ethnic background. We interrogated 850,000 CpG sites of the human genome for DNA methylation variants. Findings: The DNA methylation content of 33 CpG loci was linked with the presence of MIS-C. Of these sites, 18 (54.5%) were located in described genes. The top candidate gene was the immune T-cell mediator ZEB2; and others highly ranked candidates included the regulator of natural killer cell functional competence SH2D1B; VWA8, which contains a domain of the Von Willebrand factor A involved in the pediatric hemostasis disease; and human leukocyte antigen complex member HLA-DRB1; in addition to pro-inflammatory genes such as CUL2 and AIM2. The identified loci were used to construct a DNA methylation profile (EPIMISC) that was associated with MIS-C in both cohorts. The EPIMISC signature was also overrepresented in Kawasaki disease patients, a childhood pathology with a possible viral trigger, that shares many of the clinical features of MIS-C. Interpretation: We have characterized DNA methylation loci that are associated ...
Keywords Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children ; COVID-19 ; Kawasaki disease ; Epigenetics ; DNA methylation ; Medicine (General) ; R5-920
Subject code 610
Language English
Publishing date 2022-08-01T00:00:00Z
Publisher Elsevier
Document type Article ; Online
Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

More links

Kategorien

To top