Complexity of the neutrophil transcriptome in early and severe rheumatoid arthritis. A role for microRNAs?
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Neutrophils are innate immune cells that drive the progression of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) through the release of reactive oxygen species (ROS), neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) and proteases that damage host tissues. Neutrophil activation is regulated, in part, by dynamic changes in gene expression. In this study we have used RNAseq to measure the transcriptomes of neutrophils from people with severe, methotrexate-refractory RA and healthy controls. We identified a dynamic gene expression profile in people with severe RA. This is dominated by a type-I interferon-induced gene expression signature as well as activation of genes regulating neutrophil degranulation, NET production, response to ROS and oxidative stress. Whilst we did not detect significantly elevated levels of interferon-alpha in RA blood sera, we identified increased expression in RA neutrophils of miR-96- 5p and miR-183-5p which regulate activation of the interferon pathway as members of the miR-183C cluster. We also detected significantly elevated NET debris in RA blood sera (p<0.05). Using gene set variation analysis we explored the heterogeneity of neutrophil gene expression in RA and identified subsets of patients with gene expression profiles reflecting enhanced neutrophil degranulation and cytotoxicity, tissue inflammation or activation by interferons. Comparison with published single-cell RNAseq datasets identified RA transcriptomes where neutrophils were polarised by genes relating to early or late cell maturity, with significant genes in each polarised state being regulated by miR-146a- 5p, miR-155-5p, miR-183-5p or miR-96-5p. Overall our study demonstrates the heterogeneity of the RA neutrophil transcriptome and proposes miRNA-driven mechanisms for regulating the activated neutrophil phenotype in RA.