Title of article :
Network Analysis of Common Genes and Transcriptional Factors between Celiac Disease and Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Author/Authors :
Izadi, Fereshteh Research Center for Molecular Medicine - School of Medicine - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences, Hamadan, Iran , Soheilifar, Mohammad Hasan Department of Medical Laser - Medical Laser Research Center - Yara Institute, ACECR, Tehran, Iran , Keshmiri Neghab, Hoda Department of Photo Healing and Regeneration - Medical Laser Research Center - Yara Institute, ACECR, Tehran, Iran , Soheilifar, Mahya Department of Biology - Faculty of Sciences - Malayer University, Malayer, Iran , Esmaeeli Djavid, Gholamreza Department of Photo Healing and Regeneration - Medical Laser Research Center - Yara Institute, ACECR, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
BACKGROUND
Understanding the associations among different disorders remarkably improves their diagnosis and
treatments. Celiac disease is the most complicated and prevalent form of immune-mediated diseases.
On the other hand, inflammatory bowel diseases lead to inflammation of the intestine with an unknown
cause. Although inflammatory bowel diseases have been often thought of as an autoimmune disorder,
they can be triggered by whatever that can lead to the inflammation in the whole bowel. Henceforth,
both aforementioned diseases are related to autoimmune attacks and cause a sort of inflammatory event,
which exploring trade-off among them supposedly will lead to discovering important genes and, in turn,
to the possible common therapeutic protocols. In the current study, we aimed to determine the correlation
between the common genes in celiac disease and inflammatory bowel diseases.
METHODS
314 and 851 genes correlated with celiac disease and inflammatory bowel diseases respectively
extracted from DisGeNET were subjected to an in-silico data analysis framework to mine
prognosticates genes and the associated pathways.
RESULTS
149 shared genes between these diseases regulated by highlighted transcription factors NFKB1, IRF1,
STAT1, HSF1, GATA3 were characterized as discriminating molecules, which by further screening were
enriched in pathways mostly involved in apoptosis, T cell activation, and cytokine, chemokine, and
interleukin signaling.
CONCLUSION
We observed that the identified common genes were associated with a wide range of pathogenic
mechanisms underlying these diseases.
Keywords :
Celiac disease , Inflammatory bowel disease , Disease-associated genes , Network analysis
Journal title :
Middle East Journal of Digestive Diseases(MEJDD)