Authors
Olivier B Bakker, Raul Aguirre-Gamboa, Serena Sanna, Marije Oosting, Sanne P Smeekens, Martin Jaeger, Maria Zorro, Urmo Võsa, Sebo Withoff, Romana T Netea-Maier, Hans JPM Koenen, Irma Joosten, Ramnik J Xavier, Lude Franke, Leo AB Joosten, Vinod Kumar, Cisca Wijmenga, Mihai G Netea, Yang Li
Publication date
2018/7
Journal
Nature immunology
Volume
19
Issue
7
Pages
776-786
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group US
Description
The immune response to pathogens varies substantially among people. Whereas both genetic and nongenetic factors contribute to interperson variation, their relative contributions and potential predictive power have remained largely unknown. By systematically correlating host factors in 534 healthy volunteers, including baseline immunological parameters and molecular profiles (genome, metabolome and gut microbiome), with cytokine production after stimulation with 20 pathogens, we identified distinct patterns of co-regulation. Among the 91 different cytokine–stimulus pairs, 11 categories of host factors together explained up to 67% of interindividual variation in cytokine production induced by stimulation. A computational model based on genetic data predicted the genetic component of stimulus-induced cytokine production (correlation 0.28–0.89), and nongenetic factors influenced cytokine production as well.
Total citations
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