; Bortel, Patricia
; Hagn, Gerhard
; Meier-Menches, Samuel M ; Mohr, Thomas
; Mader, Johanna C ; Slany, Astrid
; Bileck, Andrea ; Brunmair, Julia ; Madl, Christian ; Unger, Lukas ; Hennlich, Barbara ; Weitmayr, Barbara ; Del Favero, Giorgia ; Pils, Dietmar ; Pukrop, Tobias ; Pfisterer, Nikolaus ; Feichtenschlager, Thomas ; Gerner, Christopher | Item type: | Article | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal or Publication Title: | Journal of Crohn's and Colitis | ||||
| Publisher: | OXFORD UNIV PRESS | ||||
| Place of Publication: | OXFORD | ||||
| Volume: | 17 | ||||
| Number of Issue or Book Chapter: | 9 | ||||
| Page Range: | pp. 1514-1527 | ||||
| Date: | 2023 | ||||
| Institutions: | Medicine > Lehrstuhl für Innere Medizin III (Hämatologie und Internistische Onkologie) | ||||
| Identification Number: |
| ||||
| Keywords: | INFLAMMATORY-BOWEL-DISEASE; ENDOTHELIAL-CELLS; HUMAN FIBROBLASTS; NATURAL-HISTORY; OMICS ANALYSIS; PROTEOME; THERAPY; CANCER; SUSCEPTIBILITY; HEPATOCYTES; Multi-omics; tissue proteomics; oxylipins; metabolomics; blood plasma | ||||
| Dewey Decimal Classification: | 600 Technology > 610 Medical sciences Medicine | ||||
| Status: | Published | ||||
| Refereed: | Yes, this version has been refereed | ||||
| Created at the University of Regensburg: | Yes | ||||
| Item ID: | 75975 |
Abstract
Introduction Ulcerative colitis [UC] is a chronic disease with rising incidence and unclear aetiology. Deep molecular phenotyping by multiomics analyses may provide novel insights into disease processes and characteristic features of remission states. Methods UC pathomechanisms were assessed by proteome profiling of human tissue specimens, obtained from five distinct colon locations for each of ...

Abstract
Introduction Ulcerative colitis [UC] is a chronic disease with rising incidence and unclear aetiology. Deep molecular phenotyping by multiomics analyses may provide novel insights into disease processes and characteristic features of remission states. Methods UC pathomechanisms were assessed by proteome profiling of human tissue specimens, obtained from five distinct colon locations for each of the 12 patients included in the study. Systemic disease-associated alterations were evaluated thanks to a cross-sectional setting of mass spectrometry-based multiomics analyses comprising proteins, metabolites, and eicosanoids of plasma obtained from UC patients during acute episodes and upon remission, in comparison with healthy controls. Results Tissue proteome profiling indicated colitis-associated activation of neutrophils, macrophages, B and T cells, fibroblasts, endothelial cells and platelets, and hypoxic stress, and suggested a general downregulation of mitochondrial proteins accompanying the establishment of apparent wound healing-promoting activities including scar formation. Whereas pro-inflammatory proteins were apparently upregulated by immune cells, the colitis-associated epithelial cells, fibroblasts, endothelial cells, and platelets seemed to predominantly contribute anti-inflammatory and wound healing-promoting proteins. Blood plasma proteomics indicated chronic inflammation and platelet activation, whereas plasma metabolomics identified disease-associated deregulations of gut and gut microbiome-derived metabolites. Upon remission several, but not all, molecular candidate biomarker levels recovered back to normal. Conclusion The findings may indicate that microvascular damage and platelet deregulation hardly resolve upon remission, but apparently persist as disease-associated molecular signatures. This study presents local and systemic molecular alterations integrated in a model for UC pathomechanisms, potentially supporting the assessment of disease and remission states in UC patients.
Metadata last modified: 18 Mar 2025 10:07
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