Patent application title:

Process to study changes in gene expression in granulocytic cells

Publication number:

US20050084896A1

Publication date:
Application number:

10/984,752

Filed date:

2004-11-10

Abstract:

The present invention comprises a method to identify granulocytic cell genes that are differentially expressed upon exposure to a pathogen or in a sterile inflammatory disease by preparing a gene expression profile of a granulocytic cell population exposed to a pathogen or isolated from a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease and comparing that profile to a profile prepared from quiescent granulocytic cells. The present invention is particularly useful for identifying cytokine genes, genes encoding cell surface receptors and genes encoding intermediary signaling molecules. The invention also includes methods to identify a therapeutic agent that modulates the expression of at least one gene in a granulocyte population. Genes which are differentially expressed during neutrophil contact with a pathogen, such as a virulent bacteria, or that are differentially expressed in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease are of particular importance.

Inventors:

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Classification:

C12Q1/6883 »  CPC main

Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms ; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids; Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes for diseases caused by alterations of genetic material

C12Q1/6809 »  CPC further

Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms ; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids Methods for determination or identification of nucleic acids involving differential detection

C12Q2600/142 »  CPC further

Oligonucleotides characterized by their use Toxicological screening, e.g. expression profiles which identify toxicity

C12Q2600/158 »  CPC further

Oligonucleotides characterized by their use Expression markers

Description

This application is related to application Ser. No. 08/510,032, Ser. No. 60/056,844 and application Ser. No. 08/688,514, all of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety. All published articles, patents and other publications cited throughout this application are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety.

TECHNICAL FIELD

This invention relates to compositions and methods useful to identify agents that modulate the response of granulocytes to inflammatory and infectious conditions.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Granulocytes (i.e., neutrophils, eosinophils and basophils) are involved in the immune response elicited by inflammation and infection.

Inflammation

Inflammation is a localized protective response elicited by injury or destruction of tissues which serves to destroy, dilute or wall off both the injurious agent and the injured tissue. It is characterized by fenestration of the microvasculature, leakages of the elements of blood into the interstitial spaces, and migration of leukocytes into the inflamed tissue. On a macroscopic level, this is usually accompanied by the familiar clinical signs of erythema, edema, tenderness (hyperalgesia), and pain. During this complex response, chemical mediators such as histamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine, various chemotactic factors, bradykinin, leukotrienes, and prostaglandins are released locally. Phagocytic cells migrate into the area, and cellular lysosomal membranes may be ruptured, releasing lytic enzymes. All of these events may contribute to the inflammatory response.

Inflammation is initiated by, among other things, trauma, tissue necrosis, infection or immune reactions. The immediate response is temporary vasoconstriction. Vasoconstriction is followed within seconds by the acute vascular response resulting in increased blood flow (hyperemia) and edema. The acute phase is also characterized by the margination of polymorphonuclear white blood cells (neutrophils) next to endothelial cells, followed by emigration of neutrophils into the adjacent tissue. Margination is recognized by the lining up of neutrophils along the endothelium of vessels. Emigration occurs by passage of the inflammatory cells between endothelial cells.

Neutrophils

Neutrophils are the first wave of cellular attack on invading organisms and are the characteristic cells of acute inflammation. The appearance of neutrophils in areas of inflammation may be caused by chemicals released from bacteria, factors produced nonspecifically from necrotic tissue or antibody reacting with antigen. Neutrophils use an actin-rich cytoskeleton to move in a directed manner along a chemotactic gradient from the bloodstream to an inflammatory site where they ingest particles (e.g,. bacteria) and immune complexes bearing IgG (via FcR) and/or breakdown products of the complement component C3.

Neutrophils belong to a category of white blood cells known as polymorphonuclear white blood cells. The blood cells with single nuclei (mononuclear cells) form the white blood cell population that includes macrophages, T and B cells. White blood cells that contain segmented nuclei are broadly classified as polymorphonuclear. Polymorphonuclear white blood cells (or “granulocytes”) are further subdivided into three major populations on the basis of the staining properties of their cytoplasmic granules in standard hematologic smears or tissue preparations: neutrophils staining pink, eosinophils staining red and basophils staining blue.

Neutrophils (also referred to as polymorphonuclear neutrophils-PMNs) make up 50% to 70% of the white blood cells (WBCs) of the peripheral blood and may be found scattered diffusely in many tissues, although they are most frequently found in areas of acute inflammation or acute necrosis. Like other WBCs, neutrophils are produced from precursor cells in the bone marrow and released into the blood when mature. After entering the circulation, neutrophils are thought to last only 1 or 2 days.

Neutrophils are characterized by numerous cytoplasmic granules that contain highly destructive enzymes that must be kept isolated from the cytoplasm. These granules contain a number of oxygen-independent enzymes as well as oxygen-dependent mechanisms of killing. Upon attraction to sites of inflammation, neutrophils attempt to engulf and digest bacteria coated with antibody and complement. Phagocytosis by neutrophils is also usually accompanied by release of the lysosomal enzymes into the tissue spaces, particularly if the organism is difficult for the neutrophil to digest.

At least three cytoplasmic granules are identifiable in neutrophils: specific granules containing lactoferrin, B cytochrome, the complement receptor CR3 and β2-integrin; azurophilic granules containing acid hydrolases and other enzymes; and a third granule containing gelatinase.

In addition to the role neutrophils and other granulocytic cells play in immune response to pathogens, including bacterial infection, neutrophils and other granulocytic cells play an unwanted role in many chronic inflammatory diseases. There are many disease states in which excessive or unregulated granulocytic cell infiltration and activation are implicated in exacerbating and/or causing the disease. For instance, many inflammatory diseases are characterized by massive neutrophil infiltration, such as psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, Crohn's disease, asthma, cardiac and renal reperfusion injury, adult respiratory distress syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, thrombosis and glomerulonephritis. All of these diseases are associated with increased IL-8 production which may be responsible for the chemotaxis of neutrophils into the inflammatory site.

While the role of neutrophil infiltration and activation in inflammation is well known, the biosynthetic responses of neutrophils to pathogens, chemotactic agents, proinflammatory molecules, etc. are not as well understood. Neutrophils were once thought to be in a state of terminal differentiation, thereby lacking biosynthetic ability. This view is consistent with the relative scarcity in mature circulating neutrophils of ribosomes and endoplasmic reticulum and with the ability of neutrophils to ingest particles when RNA and/or protein synthesis has been inhibited. More recently it has been demonstrated that neutrophils perform more active roles in their response to environmental stimuli.

It has thus recently been established that neutrophils synthesize de novo important macromolecules including, but not limited to interleukin (IL) 1, I1-6, I1-8, tumor necrosis factor (TNFα), granulocyte and macrophage colony-stimulating factors, interferon α (IFNα), intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM-1) and membrane and cystoskeletal molecules, such as major histocompatibility class I antigens and actin (Beaulieu et al (1992) J. Biolog. Chem. 267(1):426-432; Arnold et al. (1993) Infect. Immun. 61(6):2545-2552; and Elsner et al. (1995) Immunobiol 193:456-464). No study, however, has taken a systematic approach to assess the transcriptional response during neutrophil activation via contact with a pathogen or from neutrophils isolated from a subject with a sterile inflammatory disease.

Eosinophils and Basophils

Eosinophils are another granulocytic or polymorphonuclear white blood cell that are involved in the inflammatory response. Eosinophils are found predominately in two types of inflammation: allergy and parasite infections.

The role of eosinophils in the host response to parasites is thought to be mediated through the components of the eosinophilic granules. Eosinophils are cytotoxic to schistosome larvae through an antibody-dependent cell-mediated mechanism. Eosinophil cationic proteins are highly toxic for schistosomes and may be responsible for binding of eosinophils to parasitic worms as well as fragmentation of the parasite.

The role of eosinophils in acute inflammation is not fully understood. On one hand, there is evidence that enzymes in eosinophils may serve to limit the extent of inflammation by neutralizing mediators of anaphylaxis, such as LTC4, histamine and platelet-activating factor. On the other hand, there is increasing evidence that cationic proteins in eosinophilic granules are mediators of acute inflammation. Eosinophil activation is associated with acute tissue injury and cause an intense vasoconstriction in lung microvasculature, followed by increased pulmonary vascular permeability and pulmonary edema.

Basophils or mast cells are the other major cell type characterized as a granulocytic or polymorphonuclear white blood cell. Mast cells contain granules with a variety of biologically active agents which, when released extracellularly (degranulation), cause dilation of the smooth muscle of arterioles (vasodilation), increased blood flow, and contraction of endothelial cells, thereby opening up vessel walls to permit egress of antibodies, complement or inflammatory cells into tissue spaces.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

While the role of neutrophils and other granulocytic cells in inflammation and/or the immunological response to infection has been the subject of intense study, little is known about the global transcriptional response of granulocytes during cell activation. The present inventors have devised an approach to systematically assess the transcriptional response from granulocytic cells activated through contact with a pathogen or from granulocytic cells isolated from a subject with a sterile inflammatory disease.

The present invention includes a method to identify granulocytic cell genes that are differentially expressed upon exposure to a pathogen by preparing a gene expression profile of a granulocytic cell population exposed to a pathogen and comparing that profile to a profile prepared from quiescent granulocytic cells. cDNA species, and therefore genes, which are expressed de novo upon neutrophil contact with a pathogen are thereby identified. The present invention is particularly useful for identifying cytokine genes, genes encoding cell surface receptors and genes encoding intermediary signaling molecules.

The present invention also includes a method to identify granulocytic cell genes that are differentially expressed in response to a sterile inflammatory disease by preparing a gene expression profile of a granulocytic cell population isolated from a subject exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease and comparing that profile to a profile prepared from granulocytic cells isolated from a normal granulocytic cell population. cDNA species, and therefore genes, which are differentially expressed in the granulocytic cells of a subject exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease are thereby identified.

The present invention also includes a method to identify granulocytic cell genes that are differentially expressed upon exposure of a granulocytic cell population to an agonist (pro-inflammatory molecule) by preparing a gene expression profile of a granulocytic cell population contacted with an agonist and comparing that profile to a profile prepared from noncontacted granulocytic cells, thereby identifying cDNA species, and therefore genes, which are expressed de novo in the granulocytic cells contacted with the agonist are thereby identified.

The present invention further includes a method to identify a therapeutic or prophylactic agent that modulates the response of a granulocyte population to a pathogen, comprising the steps of preparing a first gene expression profile of a quiescent granulocyte population, preparing a second gene expression profile of a granulocyte population exposed to a pathogen, treating said exposed granulocyte population with the agent, preparing a third gene expression profile of the treated granulocyte population, comparing the first, second and third gene expression profiles and identifying agents that modulate the response of a granulocyte population to the pathogen.

Another aspect of the invention is a method to identify a therapeutic agent that modulates the expression of genes in a granulocyte population found in a subject having Another aspect of the invention includes a method to identify a therapeutic or prophylactic agent that modulates the response of a granulocyte cell population in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease, comprising the steps of preparing a first gene expression profile of a granulocyte population in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease, treating the granulocyte population with the agent, preparing a second gene expression profile of the treated granulocyte population, comparing the first and second gene expression profiles with the gene expression profile of a normal granulocyte population and identifying agents that modulate the expression of genes whose transcription levels are altered in the granulocyte population of the subject as compared with normal granulocyte population.

A further aspect of the present invention is a method to identify a therapeutic or prophylactic agent that modulates the response of a granulocytic population to an agonist (pro-inflammatory molecule), comprising the steps of preparing a first gene expression profile of a quiescent granulocyte population, preparing a second gene expression profile of a granulocyte population exposed to an agonist, treating the exposed granulocyte population with the agent, preparing a third gene expression profile of the treated granulocyte population, comparing the first, second and third gene expression profiles and identifying agents that modulate the response of a granulocytic population exposed to an agonist.

The present invention also includes a method of diagnosing the exposure of a subject to a pathogen, comprising the steps of preparing a first gene expression profile of a granulocyte population from the subject, comparing the first gene expression profile to a second gene expression profile of a granulocyte population exposed to that pathogen and to a third gene expression profile of a normal granulocyte preparation and diagnosing whether the subject has been exposed to a pathogen.

Another aspect of the invention includes a method of diagnosing a sterile inflammatory disease in a subject, comprising the steps of preparing a first gene expression profile of a granulocyte population from the subject, comparing the first gene expression profile to at least one second gene expression profile from a granulocyte population from a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease and to a third gene expression profile of a normal granulocyte preparation and thereby determining if the subject has a sterile inflammatory disease.

The present invention also includes a method of identifying new bacterial virulence factor genes by preparing a first gene expression profile of a quiescent granulocyte population, preparing a second gene expression profile of a granulocyte population exposed to a virulent or avirulent bacterial strain, preparing a third gene expression profile from a granulocyte population exposed to a bacterial strain with a mutation in a putative bacterial virulence factor gene, comparing the first, second and third gene expression profiles and identifying a bacterial virulence factor gene.

Another aspect of the invention is a composition comprising a grouping of nucleic acids that correspond to at least a part of one or more of the genes whose expression levels are modulated in a granulocyte population that has been exposed to a pathogen, these nucleic acids being affixed to a solid support.

Lastly, an aspect of the invention is a composition comprising a grouping of nucleic acids that correspond to at least part of one or more genes whose expression levels are modulated in a granulocyte population found in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease, these nucleic acids being affixed to a solid support.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 FIG. 1 is an autoradiogram of the expression profile generated from cDNAs made with RNA isolated from neutrophils exposed to avirulent Escherichia coli and virulent and avirulent Yersinia pestis.

FIG. 2 FIG. 2 is an autoradiogram of the expression profile generated from cDNAs made with RNA isolated from neutrophils exposed to virulent and avirulent E. coli, virulent and avirulent Y. pestis, LPS, GM-CSF, TNFα, or γIFN.

FIG. 3 FIG. 3 is an autoradiogram of the expression profile generated from cDNAs made with RNA isolated from neutrophils exposed to avirulent E. coli and virulent and avirulent Y. pestis. All possible 12 anchoring oligo d(T)n1, n2 were used to generate a complete expression profile for the enzyme BglII.

FIG. 4 FIG. 4 represents a summary of genes which are differentially expressed in neutrophils upon exposure to virulent and avirulent E. coli and Y. pestis.

FIG. 5 FIG. 5 is an autoradiogram of the expression profile generated from cDNAs made with RNA isolated from neutrophils exposed to avirulent E. coli and virulent and avirulent Y. pestis. All possible 12 anchoring oligo d(T)n1, n2 were used to generate a complete expression profile for the enzyme BamHI.

FIG. 6 is a section of an autoradiogram showing the differences in band intensity for 2 mRNA species when neutrophils are exposed to avirulent E. coli and virulent and avirulent Y. pestis.

MODES OF CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION

General Description

The response of neutrophils to pathogens, including bacterial pathogens, is a subject of primary importance in view of the need to find ways to modulate the immune response to infection. Similarly, the response of neutrophils to agonists (pro-inflammatory molecules) is a subject of primary importance in view of the need to find better ways of controlling inflammation in various disease states. One means of assessing the response of neutrophils to pathogens and agonists is to measure the ability of neutrophils to synthesize specific RNA de novo upon contact with the pathogen or agonist.

The following discussion presents a general description of the invention as well definitions for certain terms used herein.

Definitions

Granulocytic cells, also known as polymorphonuclear white blood cells, include neutrophils, also known as polymorphonuclear neutrophils or peripheral blood neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils, also referred to a mast cells.

The term “pathogen” refers to any infectious organism including bacteria, viruses, parasites, mycoplasma, protozoans, and fungi (including molds and yeast). Pathogenic bacteria include, but are not limited to Staphylococci (e.g. aureus), Streptococci (e.g. pneumoniae), Clostridia (e.g. perfringens), Neisseria (e.g. gonorrhoeae), Enterobacteriaceae (e.g. coli as well as Klebsiella, Salmonella, Shigella, Yersinia and Proteus), Helicobacter (e.g. pylori), Vibrio (e.g. cholerae), Campylobacter (e.g. jejuni), Pseudomonas (e.g. aeruginosa), Haemophilus (e.g. influenzae), Bordetella (e.g. pertussis), Mycoplasma (e.g. pneumoniae), Ureaplasma (e.g. urealyticum), Legionella (e.g. pneumophila), Spirochetes (e.g. Treponema, Leptospira and Borrelia), Mycobacteria (e.g. tuberculosis, smegmatis), Actinomyces (e.g. (israelii), Nocardia (e.g. asteroides), Chlamydia (e.g. trachomatis), Rickettsia, Coxiella, Ehrilichia, Rochalimaea, Brucella, Yersinia, Fracisella, and Pasteurella.

The term “sterile inflammatory disease” refers to any inflammatory disease caused by immune or nonimmune mechanisms not directly linked to infection (see Stewart et al.). Examples of sterile inflammatory diseases include, but are not limited to psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, glomerulonephritis, asthma, cardiac and renal reperfusion injury, thrombosis, adult respiratory distress syndrome, inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis and periodontal disease.

The phrase “solid support” refers to any support to which nucleic acids can be bound or immobilized, including nitrocellulose, nylon, glass, other solid supports which are positively charged and nanochannel glass arrays disclosed by Beattie (WO 95/1175).

The phrase “gene expression profile”, also referred to as a “differential expression profile” or “expression profile” refers to any representation of the expression of at least one mRNA species in a cell sample or population. For instance, a gene expression profile can refer to an autoradiograph of labeled cDNA fragments produced from total cellular mRNA separated on the basis of size by known procedures. Such procedures include slab gel electrophoresis, capillary gene electrophoresis, high performance liquid chromatography, and the like. Digitized representations of scanned electrophoresis gels are also included as are two and three dimensional representations of the digitized data.

While a gene expression profile encompasses a representation of the expression level of at least one mRNA species, in practice, the typical gene expression profile represents the expression level of multiple mRNA species. For instance, a gene expression profile useful in the methods and compositions disclosed herein represents the expression levels of at least about 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 150, 200, 300, 500, 1000 or more preferably, substantially all of the detectable mRNA species in a cell sample or population. Particularly preferred are gene expression profiles or arrays affixed to a solid support that contain a sufficient representative number of mRNA species whose expression levels are modulated under the relevant infection, disease, screening, treatment or other experimental conditions. In some instances a sufficient representative number of such mRNA species will be about 1, 2, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50, 50-75 or 100.

Gene expression profiles can be produced by any means known in the art, including, but not limited to the methods disclosed by: Liang et al. (1992) Science 257:967-971; Ivanova et al. (1995) Nucleic Acids Res. 23:29542958; Guilfoyl et al. (1997) Nucleic Acids Res. 25(9):1854-1858; Chee et al. (1996) Science 274:610-614; Velculescu et al. (1995) Science 270:484-487; Fischer et al. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92(12):5331-5335; and Kato (1995) Nucleic Acids Res. 23(18):3685-3690. Preferably, and Prashar et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93:659-663.

As an example, gene expression profiles as described herein are made to identify one or more genes whose expression levels are modulated in a granulocytic cell population exposed to a pathogen or isolated from a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease. The assaying of the modulation of gene expression via the production of a gene expression profile generally involves the production of cDNA from polyA RNA (mRNA) isolated from granulocytes as described below.

The mRNAs are isolated from a granulocytic cell source. The cells may be obtained from an in vivo source, such as a peripheral blood. As is apparent to one skilled in the art, any granulocytic cell type may be used, however, neutrophils are preferred. Furthermore, the peripheral blood cells that are initially obtained may be subjected to various separation techniques (e.g., flow cytometry, density gradients).

mRNAs are isolated from cells by any one of a variety of techniques. Numerous techniques are well known (see e.g., Sambrook et al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Approach, Cold Spring harbor Press, NY, 1987; Ausubel et., Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, Greene Publishing Co. NY, 1995). In general, these techniques first lyse the cells and then enrich for or purify RNA. In one such protocol. Cells are lysed in a Tris-buffered solution containing SDS. The lysate is extracted with phenol/chloroform, and nucleic acids are precipitated. Purification of poly(A)—containing RNA is not a requirement. The mRNAs may, however, be purified from crude preparations of nucleic acids or from total RNA by chromatography, such as binding and elution from oligo(dT)-cellulose or poly(U)-Sepharose®. As stated above, other protocols and methods for isolation of RNAs may be substituted.

The mRNAs are reverse transcribed using an RNA-directed DNA polymerase, such as reverse transcriptase isolated from AMV, MoMuLV or recombinantly produced. Many commercial sources of enzyme are available (e.g., Pharmacia, New England Biolabs, Stratagene Cloning Systems). Suitable buffers, cofactors, and conditions are well known and supplied by manufacturers (see also, Sambrook et al., supra; Ausubel et al., supra).

Various oligonucleotides are used in the production of cDNA. In particular, the methods utilize oligonucleotide primers for cDNA synthesis, adapters, and primers for amplification. Oligonucleotides are generally synthesized so single strands by standard chemistry techniques, including automated synthesis. Oligonucleotides are subsequently de-protected and may be purified by precipitation with ethanol, chromatographed using a sized or reversed-phase column, denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC), or other suitable method. In addition, within certain preferred embodiments, a functional group, such as biotin, is incorporated preferably at the 5′ or 3′ terminal nucleotide. A biotinylated oligonucleotide may be synthesized using pre-coupled nucleotides, or alternatively, biotin may be conjugated to the oligonucleotide using standard chemical reactions. Other functional groups, such as florescent dyes, radioactive molecules, digoxigenin, and the like, may also be incorporated.

Partially-double stranded adaptors are formed from single stranded oligonucleotides by annealing complementary single-stranded oligonucleotides that are chemically synthesized or by enzymatic synthesis. Following synthesis of each strand, the two oligonucleotide strands are mixed together in a buffered salt solution (e.g., 1 M NaCl, 100 mM Tris-HCl pH.8.0, 10 mM EDTA) or in a buffered solution containing Mg2 (e.g., 10 mM MgCl2) and annealed by heating to high temperature and slow cooling to room temperature.

The oligonucleotide primer that primes first strand DNA synthesis comprises a 5′ sequence incapable of hybridizing to a polyA tail of the mRNAs, and a 3′ sequence that hybridizes to a portion of the polyA tail of the mRNAs and at least one non-polyA nucleotide immediately upstream of the polyA tail. The 5′ sequence is preferably a sufficient length that can serve as a primer for amplification. The 5′ sequence also preferably has an average G+C content and does not contain large palindromic sequence; some palindromes, such as a recognition sequence for a restriction enzyme, may be acceptable. Examples of suitable 5′ sequences are

  • CTCTCAAGGATC:TACCGCT (SEQ ID No. ______),
  • CAGGGTAGACGACGCTACGC (SEQ ID No. ______), and
  • TAATACCGCGCCACATAGCA (SEQ ID No. ______).

The 5′ sequence is joined to a 3′ sequence comprising sequence that hybridizes to a portion of the polyA tail of mRNAs and at least one non-polyA nucleotide immediately upstream. Although the polyA-hybridizing sequence is typically a homopolymer of dT or dU, it need only contain a sufficient number of dT or dU bases to hybridize to polyA under the conditions employed. Both oligo-dT and oligo-dU primers have been used and give comparable results. Thus, other bases may be interspersed or concentrated, as long as hybridization is not impeded. Typically, 12 to 18 bases or 12 to 30 bases of dT or dU will be used. However, as one skilled in the art appreciates, the length need only be sufficient to obtain hybridization. The non-polyA nucleotide is A, C, or G, or a nucleotide derivative, such as inosinate. If one non-polyA nucleotide is used, then three oligonucleotide primers are needed to hybridize to all mRNAs. If two non-polyA nucleotides are used, then 12 primers are needed to hybridize to all mRNAs (AA, AC, AG, AT, CA, CC, CG, CT, GA, GC, GG, GT). If three non-poly A nucleotides are used then 48 primers are needed (3×4×4). Although there is no theoretical upper limit on the number of non-polyA nucleotides, practical considerations make the use of one or two non-polyA nucleotides preferable.

For cDNA synthesis, the mRNAs are either subdivided into three (if one non-polyA nucleotide is used) or 12 (if two non-polyA nucleotides are used) fractions, each containing a single oligonucleotide primer, or the primers may be pooled and contacted with a mRNA preparation. Other subdivisions may alternatively be used. Briefly, first strand cDNA is initiated from the oligonucleotide primer by reverse transcriptase (RTase). As noted above, RTase may be obtained from numerous sources and protocols are well known. Second strand synthesis may be performed by RTase (Gubler and Hoffman, Gene 25: 263, 1983), which also has a DNA-directed DNA polymerase activity, with or without a specific primer, by DNA polymerase 1 in conjunction with RNaseH and DNA ligase, or other equivalent methods. The double-stranded cDNA is generally treated by phenol:chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation to remove protein and free nucleotides.

Double-stranded cDNA is subsequently digested with an agent that cleaves in a sequence-specific manner. Such cleaving agents include restriction enzymes. Restriction enzyme digestion is preferred; enzymes that are relatively infrequent cutters (e.g., ≧5 bp recognition site) are preferred and those that leave overhanging ends are especially preferred. A restriction enzyme with a six base pair recognition site cuts approximately 8% of cDNAs, so that approximately 12 such restriction enzymes should be needed to digest every cDNA at least once. By using 30 restriction enzymes, digestion of every cDNA is assured.

The adapters for use in the present invention are designed such that the two strands are only partially complementary and only one of the nucleic acid strands that the adapter is ligated to can be amplified. Thus, the adapter is partially double-stranded (i.e., comprising two partially hybridized nucleic acid strands), wherein portions of the two strands are non-complementary to each other and portions of the two strands are complementary to each other. Conceptually, the adapter is “Y-shaped” or “bubble-shaped.” When the 5′ region is non-paired, the 3′ end of other strand cannot be extended by a polymerase to make a complementary copy. The ligated adapter can also be blocked at the 3′ end to eliminate extension during subsequent amplifications. Blocking groups include dideoxynucleotides or any other agent capable of blocking the 3′-OH. In this type of adapter (“Y-shaped”), the non-complementary portion of the upper strand of the adapters is preferably a length that can serve as a primer for amplification. As noted above, the non-complementary portion of the lower strand need only be one base, however, a longer sequence is preferable (e.g., 3 to 20 bases; 3 to 15 bases; 5 to 15 bases; or 14 to 24 bases). The complementary portion of the adapter should be long enough to form a duplex under conditions of litigation.

For “bubble-shaped” adapters, the non-complementary portion of the upper strand is preferably a length that can serve as a primer for amplification. Thus, this portion is preferably 15 to 30 bases. Alternatively, the adapter can have a structure similar to the Y-shaped adapter, but has a 3′ end that contains a moiety that a DNA polymerase cannot extend from.

Amplification primers are also used in the present invention. Two different amplification steps are performed in the preferred aspect. In the first, the 3′ end (referenced to mRNA) of double stranded cDNA that has been cleaved and ligated with an adapter is amplified. For this amplification, either a single primer or a primer pair is used. The sequence of the single primer comprises at least a portion of the 5′ sequence of the oligonucleotide primer used for first strand cDNA synthesis. The portion need only be long enough to serve as an amplification primer. The primer pair consists of a first primer whose sequence comprises at least a portion of the 5′ sequence of the oligonucleotide primer as described above; and a second primer whose sequence comprises at least a portion of the sequence of one strand of the adapter in the non-complementary portion. The primer will generally contain all the sequence of the non-complementary potion, but may contain less of the sequence, especially when the non-complementary portion is very long, or more of the sequence, especially when the non-complementary portion is very short. In some embodiments, the primer will contain sequence of the complementary portion, as long as that sequence does not appreciably hybridize to the other strand of the adapter under the amplification conditions employed, for example, in one embodiment, the primer sequence comprises four bases of the complementary region to yield a 19 base primer, and amplification cycles are performed at 56° C. (annealing temperature), 72° C. (extension temperature), and 94° C. (denaturation temperature). In another embodiment, the primer is 25 bases long and has 10 bases of sequence in the complementary portion. Amplification cycles for this primer are performed at 68° C. (annealing and extension temperature) and 94° C. (denaturation temperature). By using these longer primers, the specificity of priming is increased.

The design of the amplification primers will generally follow well-known guidelines, such as average G-C content, absence of hairpin structures, inability to form primer-dimers and the like. At times, however, it will be recognized that deviations from such guidelines may be appropriate or desirable.

After amplification, the lengths of the amplified fragments are determined. Any procedure that separate nucleic acids on the basis of size and allows detection or identification of the nucleic acids is acceptable. Such procedures include slap get electrophoresis, capillary gel electrophoresis, high performance liquid chromatography, and the like.

Electrophoresis is technique based on the mobility of DNA in an electric field. Negatively charged DNA migrates towards a positive electrode at a rate dependent on their total charge, size, and shape. Most often, DNA is electrophoresed in agarose or polyacrylamide gels. For maximal resolution, polyacrylamide is preferred and for maximal linearity, a denaturant, such as urea is present. A typical get setup uses a 19:1 mixture of acrylamide:bisacrylamide and a Tris-borate buffer. DNA samples are denatured and applied to the get, which is usually sandwiched between glass plates. A typical procedure can be found in Sambrook et al (Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Approach, Cold Spring Harbor Press, NY, 1989) or Ausubel et al. (Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, Greene Publishing Co., NY, 1995). Variations may be substituted as long as sufficient resolution is obtained.

Capillary electrophoresis (CE) in its various manifestations (free solution, isotachophoresis, isoelectric focusing, polyacrylamide get. micellar electrokinetic “chromatography”) allows high resolution separation of very small sample volumes. Briefly, in capillary electrophoresis, a neutral coated capillary, such as a 50 μm×37 cm column (eCAP neutral, Beckman Instruments, CA), is filled with a linear polyacrylamide (e.g., 0.2% polyacrylamide), a sample is introduced by high-pressure injection followed by an injection of running buffer (e.g., 1× TBE). the sample is electrophoresed and fragments are detected. An order of magnitude increase can be achieved with the use of capillary electrophoresis. Capillaries may be used in parallel for increased throughput (Smith et al. (1990) Nuc. Acids. Res. 18:4417; Mathies and Huang (1992) Nature 359:167). Because of the small sample volume that can be loaded onto a capillary, sample may be concentrated to increase level of detection. One means of concentration is sample stacking (Chien and Burgi (1992) Anal. Cheni 64:489A). In sample stacking, a large volume of sample in a low concentration buffer is introduced to the capillary column. the capillary is then filled with a buffer of the same composition, but at higher concentration, such that when the sample ions reach the capillary buffer with a lower electric field, they stack into a concentrated zone. Sample stacking can increase detection by one to three orders of magnitude. Other methods of concentration, such as isotachophoresis, may also be used.

High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) is a chromatographic separation technique that separates compounds in solution. HPLC instruments consist of a reservoir of mobile phase, a pump, an injector, a separation column, and a detector. Compounds are separated by injecting an aliquot of the sample mixture onto the column. The different components in the mixture pass through the column at different rates due to differences in their partitioning behavior between the mobile liquid phase and the stationary phase. IP-RO-HPLC on non-porous PS/DVB particles with chemically bonded alkyl chains can also be used to analyze nucleic acid molecules on the basis of size (Huber et al. (1993) Anal. Biochem. 121:351; Huber et al. (1993) Nuc. Acids Res. 21:1061; Huber et al. (1993) Biotechniques 16:898).

In each of these analysis techniques, the amplified fragments are detected. A variety of labels can be used to assist in detection. Such labels include, but are not limited to, radioactive molecules (e.g., 35S, 32P, 33P) fluorescent molecules, and mass spectrometric tags. The labels may be attached to the oligonucleotide primers or to nucleotides that are incorporated during DNA synthesis, including amplification.

Radioactive nucleotides may be obtained from commercial sources; radioactive primers may be readily generated by transfer of label from γ-32P-ATP to a 5′-OH group by a kinase (e.g., T4 polynucleotide kinase). Detection systems include autoradiograph, phosphor image analysis and the like.

Fluorescent nucleotides may be obtained from commercial sources (e.g., ABI, Foster city, CA) or generated by chemical reaction using appropriately derivatized dyes. Oligonucleotide primers can be labeled, for example, using succinimidyl esters to conjugate to amine-modified oligonucleotides. A variety of florescent dyes may be used, including 6 carboxyfluorescein, other carboxyfluorescein derivatives, carboxyrhodamine derivatives, Texas red derivatives, and the like. Detection systems include photomultiplier tubes with appropriate wave-length filters for the dyes used. DNA sequence analysis systems, such as produced by ABI (Foster City, Calif.), may be used.

After separation of the amplified cDNA fragments, cDNA fragments which correspond to differentially expressed mRNA species are isolated, reamplified and sequenced according to standard procedures. For instance, bands corresponding the cDNA fragments can be cut from the electrophoresis gel, reamplified and subcloned into any available vector, including pCRscript using the PCR script cloning kit (Stratagene). The insert is then sequenced using standard procedures, such as cycle sequencing on an ABI sequencer.

An additional means of analysis comprises hybridization of the amplified fragments to one or more sets of oligonucleotides immobilized on a solid substrate. Historically, the solid substrate is a membrane, such as nitrocellulose or nylon. More recently, the substrate is a silicon wafer or a borosilicate slide. The substrate may be porous (Beattie et al. WO 95/11755) or solid. Oligonucleotides are synthesized in situ or synthesized prior to deposition on the substrate. Various chemistries are known for attaching oligonucleotide. Many of these attachment chemistries rely upon functionalizing oligonucleotides to contain a primary amine group. The oligonucleotides are arranged in an array form, such that the position of each oligonucleotide sequence can be determined.

The amplified fragments, which are generally labeled according to one of the methods described herein, are denatured and applied to the oligonucleotides on the substrate under appropriate salt and temperature conditions. In certain embodiments, the conditions are chosen to favor hybridization of exact complementary matches and disfavor hybridization of mismatches. Unhybridized nucleic acids are washed off and the hybridized molecules detected, generally both for position and quantity. The detection method will depend upon the label used. Radioactive labels, fluorescent labels and mass spectrometry label are among the suitable labels.

The present invention as set forth in the specific embodiments, includes methods to identify a therapeutic agent that modulates the expression of at least one gene in a granulocyte population. Genes which are differentially expressed during neutrophil contact with a pathogen, such as a virulent bacteria, or that are differentially expressed in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease are of particular importance.

In general, the method to identify a therapeutic or prophylactic agent that modulates the response of a granulocyte population to a pathogen, comprises the steps of preparing a first gene expression profile of a quiescent granulocyte population, preparing a second gene expression profile of a granulocyte population exposed to a pathogen, treating the exposed granulocyte population with the agent, preparing a third gene expression profile of the treated granulocyte population, comparing the first, second and third gene expression profiles and identifying agents that modulate the response of a granulocytic population to the pathogen.

In another format, the method is used to identify a therapeutic agent that modulates the expression of genes in a granulocyte population found in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease. The general method comprises the steps of preparing a first gene expression profile of a granulocyte population in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease, treating the granulocyte population with the agent, preparing a second gene expression profile of the treated granulocyte population, comparing the first and second gene expression profile with the gene expression profile of a normal granulocyte preparation and identifying agents that modulate the expression of genes whose transcription levels are altered in the granulocyte population of the subject as compared with normal granulocyte population.

While the above methods for identifying a therapeutic agent comprise the comparison of gene expression profiles from treated and not-treated granulocytic cells, many other variations are immediately envisioned by one of ordinary skill in the art. As an example, as a variation of a method to identify a therapeutic or prophylactic agent that modulates the response of a granulocytic population to a pathogen, the second gene expression profile of a granulocyte population exposed to a pathogen and the third gene expression profile of the treated granulocyte population can each be independently normalized using the first gene expression profile prepared from a quiescent granulocyte population. Normalization of the profiles can easily be achieved by scanning autoradiographs corresponding to each profile, and subtracting the digitized values corresponding to each band on the autoradiograph from quiescent granulocytic cells from the digitized value for each corresponding band on autoradiographs corresponding to the second and third gene expression profiles. After normalization, the second and third gene expression profils can be compared directly to detect cDNA fragments which correspond to mRNA species which are differentially expressed upon exposure of the granulocyte population to the agent to be tested.

Specific Embodiments

EXAMPLE 1

Production of Gene Expression Profiles Generated from cDNAs Made with RNA Isolated from Neutrophils Exposed to Virulent and Avirulent Bacteria.

Expression profiles of RNA expression levels from neutrophils exposed to various bacteria offer a powerful means of identifying genes that are specifically regulated in response to bacterial infection. As an example, the production of expression profiles from neutrophils exposed to virulent and avirulent E. coli and Y. pestis allow the identification of neutrophil genes that are specifically regulated in response to bacterial infection.

Neutrophils were isolated from normal donor peripheral blood following the LPS-free method. Peripheral blood was isolated using a butterfly needle and a syringe containing 5 cc ACD, 5 cc of 6% Dextran (in normal saline). After 30 minutes of settling, plasma was collected and HBSS (without Ca++ or Mg++) was added to a total volume of 40 ml. The plasma was centrifuged (1500 rpm, for 15 m at 4° C.), the supernatant decanted and cold HBSS added to resuspend the cells. The cell suspension was then layered onto a cold Ficoll Hypaq, centrifuged at 500×g for 30 m at 4° C. The pellet contains polymorphonuclear neutrophils. Neutrophils can also be isolated by other commonly used methods such as those disclosed in Current Protocols of Immunology (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.), Babior et al. (1981) In:Leokocyte Function, Cline, M. J. Ed., p.1-38 (Church Livingstone, N.Y.), and Haslett et al. (1985) Am. J. Pathol. 119:101-110.

Following isolation, neutrophils were incubated with E. coli or Y. pestis. Before incubation, bacteria are harvested and washed in phosphate buffered saline and opsonized either autologous human serum or complement factor C7 deficient human serum (SIGMA). Incubation was at a ratio of approximately a PMN:bacteria ratio of 1:20 in RPMI 1640 (HEPES buffered) with heat inactivated Fetal Bovine Serum at 37° C. with gentle mixing in a rotary shaker bath.

As controls, neutrophils were incubated with either bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or latex beads. LPS was added to approximately 3.38×108 cells in 100 ml of RPMI containing 6% autologous serum to a final concentration of 1 ng/ml to 1 μg/l. Incubation proceeded for 30 or 120 minutes with gentle rotation in disposable polycarbonate Erlenmeyer flasks at 37° C. After incubation, the cells were spun down and washed once with HBSS.

Total cellular RNA was prepared from untreated and treated neutrophils are described above using the procedure of Newburger et al. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 266(24): 16171-7 and Newburger et al. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85:5215-5219. Ten micrograms of total RNA, the amount obtainable from about 3×106 neutrophils, is sufficient for a complete set of cDNA expression profiles.

Synthesis of cDNA was performed as previously described by Prashar et al. in WO 97/05286 and in Prashar et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93:659-663. Briefly, cDNA was synthesized according to the protocol described in the GIBCO/BRL kit for cDNA synthesis. The reaction mixture for first-strand synthesis included 6 μg of total RNA, and 200 ng of a mixture of 1-base anchored oligo(dT) primers with all three possible anchored bases (ACGTAATACGACTCACTATAGGGCGAATTGGGTCGACTTTTTTTT TTn1 wherein n1=A/C or G) along with other components for first-strand synthesis reaction except reverse transcriptase. This mixture was incubated at 65° C. for 5 m, chilled on ice and the process repeated. Alternatively, the reaction mixture may include 10 μg of total RNA, and 2 μmol of 1 of the 2-base anchored oligo(dT) primers a heel such as RP5.0 (CTCTCAAGGATCTTACCGCTT18AT), or RP6.0 (TAATACCGCGCCACATAGCAT18CG), or RP9.2 (CAGGGTAGACGACGCTACGCT18GA) along with other components for first-strand synthesis reaction except reverse transcriptase. This mixture was then layered with mineral oil and incubated at 65° C. for 7 min followed by 50° C. for another 7 min. At this stage, 2 μl of Superscript reverse transcriptase (200 units/μl; GIBCO/BRL) was added quickly and mixed, and the reaction continued for 1 hr at 45-50° C. Second-strand synthesis was performed at 16° C. for 2 hr. At the end of the reaction, the cDNAs were precipitated with ethanol and the yield of cDNA was calculated. In our experiments, ≈200 ng of cDNA was obtained from 10 μg of total RNA.

The adapter oligonucleotide sequences were A1 (TAGCGTCCGGCGCAGCGACGGCCAG) and A2 (GATCCTGGCCGTCGGCTGTCTGTCGGCGC). One microgram of oligonucleotide A2 was first phosphorylated at the 5′ end using T4 polynucleotide kinase (PNK). After phosphorylation, PNK was heated denatured, and lug of the oligonucleotide A1 was added along with 10× annealing buffer (1 M NaCl/100 mM Tris-HCl, pH8.0/10 mM EDTA, pH8.0) in a final vol of 20 μl. This mixture was then heated at 65° C. for 10 min followed by slow cooling to room temperature for 30 min. resulting in formation of the Y adapter at a final concentration of 100 ng/μl. About 20 ng of the cDNA was digested with 4 units of Bgl II in a final vol of 10 μl for 30 min at 37° C. Two microliters (≈4 ng of digested cDNA) of this reaction mixture was then used for ligation to 100 ng (≈50-fold) of the Y-shaped adapter in a final vol of 5 μl for 16 hr at 15° C. After ligation, the reaction mixture was diluted with water to a final vol of 80 μl (adapter ligated cDNA concentration, =50 μg/μl) and heated at 65° C. for 10 min to denature T4 DNA ligase, and 2-μl aliquots (with ≈100 pg of cDNA) were used for PCR.

The following sets of primers were used for PCR amplification of the adapter ligated 3′-end cDNAs:

TGAAGCCGAGACGTCGGTCG(T)18 n1, n2 (wherein n1, n2=AA, AC, AG AT CA CC CG CT GA GC GG and GT) as the 3′ primer with A1 as the 5′ primer or alternatively RP 5.0, RP 6.0, or RP 9.2 used as 3′ primers with primer A1.1 serving as the 5′ primer. To detect the PCR products on the display gel, 24 pmol of oligonucleotide A1 or A1.1 was 5′-end-labeled using 15 μl of [γ-32P]ATP (Amersham; 3000 Ci/mmol) and PNK in a final volume of 20 μl for 30 min at 37° C. After heat denaturing PNK at 65° C. for 20 min, the labeled oligonucleotide was diluted to a final concentration of 2 μM in 80 μl with unlabeled oligonucleotide A1.1. The PCR mixture (20 μl) consisted of 2 μl (≈100 pg) of the template, 2 μl of 10×PCR buffer (100 mM Tris HCl, pH 8.3/500 mM KCl), 2 μl of 15 mM MgCl2 to yield 1.5 mM final Mg2+ concentration optimum in the reaction mixture, 200 μM dNTPs, 200 nM each 5′ and 3′ PCR primers, and 1 unit of Amplitaq Gold. Primers and dNTPs were added after preheating the reaction mixture containing the rest of the components at 85° C. This “hot start” PCR was done to avoid artefactual amplification arising out of arbitrary annealing of PCR primers at lower temperature during transition from room temperature to 94° C. in the first PCR cycle. PCR consisted of 5 cycles of 94° C. for 30 sec, 55° C. for 2 min, and 72° C. for 60 sec followed by 25 cycles of 94° C. for 30 sec, 60° C. for 2 min, and 72° C. for 60 sec. A higher number of cycles resulted in smeary gel patterns. PCR products (2.5 μl) were analyzed on 6% polyacrylamide sequencing gel. For double or multiple digestion following adapter ligation, 13.2 μl of the ligated cDNA sample was digested with a secondary restriction enzyme(s) in a final vol of 20 μl. From this solution, 3 μl was used as template for PCR. This template vol of 3 μl carried ≈100 pg of the cDNA and 10 mM MgCl2 (from the 10× enzyme buffer), which diluted to the optimum of 1.5 mM in the final PCR vol of 20 μl. Since Mg2+ comes from the restriction enzyme buffer, it was not included in the reaction mixture when amplifying secondarily cut cDNA. Bands were extracted from the display gels as described by Liang et al. (1995 Curr. Opin. Immunol. 7:274-280), reamplified using the 5′ and 3′ primers, and subcloned into pCR-Script with high efficiency using the PCR-Script cloning kit from Stratagene. Plasmids were sequenced by cycle sequencing on an ABI automated sequencer.

FIG. 1 presents an autoradiogram of the expression profile generated from cDNAs made from RNA isolated from control (untreated) neutrophils (lanes 1, 5, 10, 13, 14 and 16), neutrophils incubated with avirulent E. coli K12 (lanes 2 and 11), virulent Y. pestis (lane 3), avirulent Y. pestis (lane 4), Y. pestis yopB (lane 6), Y. pestis yopE (lane 7), Y. pestis yopH (lane 8), latex beads (lanes 9 and 19), virulent Entero Hemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) (lane 12), LPS (lane 15), 1 ng/ml LPS for 30 minutes (lane 17), and LPS for 120 minutes (lane 18). The anchoring oligo d(T)18 n1, n2 has A and C at the n1 and n2 positions, respectively. The cDNAs were digested with BglII.

EXAMPLE 2

Production of Gene Expression Profiles Generated from cDNAs Made with RNA Isolated from Neutrophils Exposed to Virulent and Avirulent Bacteria and Neutrophils Exposed to Cytokines.

Neutrophils were isolated from normal donor peripheral blood following the LPS-free method as set forth in Example 1.

Neutrophils were incubated with virulent and avirulent E. coli or Y. pestis, LPS at 1 ng/ml, GM-CSF at 100 units/ml, TNFα at 1000 units/ml, or γIFN at 100 units/ml. The bacterial cells, LPS or cytokines were added to approximately 3.38×108 cells in 100 ml of RPMI containing 6% H1 autologous serum. Incubation proceeded for 2 to 4 hours, preferably 2 hours, with gentle rotation in disposable polycarbonate Erlenmeyer flasks at 37° C. After incubation, the cells were spun down and washed once with HBSS.

After incubation of the neutrophils, RNA was extracted and the cDNA profiles prepared as described in Example 1. FIG. 2 is an autoradiogram of the expression profiles generated from cDNAs made with RNA isolated from control (untreated) neutrophils (lanes 1, 5, 10 and 14), neutrophils incubated with avirulent E. coli K12 (lanes 2 and 11), virulent Y pestis (lanes 3 and 12), avirulent Y. pestis (lanes 4 and 13), 1 ng/ml LPS (lanes 6 and 15), 100 units/ml GM-CSF (lanes 7 and 16), 1000 units/ml TNFα (lanes 8 and 17) and 100 units/ml γIFN (lanes 9 and 18). The anchoring oligo d(T)18n1, n2 has A and C at the n1 and n2 positions for lanes 1-9 and G and G at the n1 and n2 for lanes 10-18. The cDNAs were digested with BglII.

As exhibited by FIG. 2, the differential expression of mRNA species (as exhibited by cDNA fragments) in neutrophils exposed to virulent and avirulent E. coli and Y. pestis is not equivalent to the differential expression of mRNA species in neutrophils exposed to the various cytokines.

EXAMPLE 3

Production of Gene Expression Profiles Generated from cDNAs Made with RNA Isolated from Neutrophils Exposed to Bacteria Using all 12 Possible Anchoring Oligo d(T) n1,n2.

Neutrophils were isolated from normal donor peripheral blood following the LPS-free method.

Neutrophils were incubated with E. coli or Y. pestis.

After incubation of the neutrophils, RNA was extracted and the cDNA profiles prepared as described in Example 1. FIG. 3 is an autoradiogram of the expression profiles generated from cDNAs made with RNA isolated from control (untreated) neutrophils (lane 1), neutrophils incubated with avirulent E. coli K12 (lane 2), virulent Y. pestis (lane 3), avirulent Y. pestis (lane 4). The anchoring oligo d(T)18 n1 and n2 positions are indicated at the top of the figure. The cDNAs were digested with BglII.

FIG. 4 represents a summary of genes which are differentially expressed in neutrophils upon exposure to virulent and avirulent E. coli and Y. pestis. Expression patterns are determined by visual examination of the autoradiography gels comparing band intensity between neutrophils exposed to the various bacteria. The autoradiography gels can also be scanned using commonly available equipment, such s a UMAX D-1L scanner. Bands which exhibit altered intensities in gene expression profiles from neutrophils exposed to the various bacteria when compared to the gene expression profile prepared from normal nonexposed neutrophils are then extracted from the display gel as previously described by in Example 1. The isolated fragments are then reamplified using 5′ and 3′ primers, subcloned into pCR-Script (Stratagene) and sequenced using an ABI automated sequencer.

Tables 1 and 2 represent a summary of cDNA bands which are differentially expressed in response to exposure to E. coli.

mRNA Closest
Expression Sequenced Genbank Closest
Clones Pattern Control 10′ 30′ 60′ 120′ n1n2 by Acc. # Homology
846 Up 0 0 +− 2+ 4+ AA Yale K02286 Urokinase
Gene
847 Up +− +− +− + 2-3+ AA Yale
848 Up +− +− 0 +− 2+ AA Yale
849 Up +− +− +− +− + 1-2+ AA Yale
850 Down + 0 0 0 0 AA Yale
851 Up 0 0 0 0 + AA Yale
852 Down + + +− + 0 AA Yale
853 Up 0 0 +− +− 1-2+ AA Yale
854 Down 2+ + +− 0 0 +− AA Yale AF039715 C. elegans
cosmidR0
6A10
T103 Up 3+ 3+ 3-4+ 4-5+ 4-5+ AA Yale M77693 HUMAN
SSAT
855 Up +− +− +− +− 2+ AA Yale G29248 Human
STS
SHGC
17036
856 Up +− +− +− +− 2+ AA Yale AI038932 ox96h08.xl
soares
senescent
Fibroblasts
T104 Up + + +− + 2+ AA Yale AA931109 HUMAN
CGAP
KID3
T105 3-4+ 3-4+ 3-4+ 3+ 3+ AA Yale M11354 HUMAN
H3.3
HISTONE
857 + + 2+ + +− AA Yale
T107 Down 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ 2+ AA Yale AA936257 on43e12
Sinel
CGAP co8
858 Down 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ + +− AA Yale
859 Up +− +− +− 2+ 1-2+ AA Yale AC004987 DJ1173120
Clone
860 Down 2-3+ 2-3+ 2+ 2+ +− AA Yale
861 Down + + 1-2+ +− +− AA Yale
862 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ AA Yale
863 Down 2+ + +− + + AA Yale H26311 Cystic
Fibrosis
Antigen
864 Up 2+ 2+ 2+ 2-3+ 2-3+ AA Yale
865 Up + + 2+ 2-3+ 2+ AA Yale
866 Up +− +− + + 2+ AA Yale G06511 Human
STS WI-
7311
867 Down 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ 1-2+ AA Yale
868 +− +− + 2+ +− AA Yale
869 Up + +− +− +− 2+ AC Yale
870 Up 0 0 0 +− 1-2+ AC Yale
871 Down 1-2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ + +− AC Yale AI026899 ov42do7.xl
Soares
testis nht
872 + + +− + + AC Yale AA916304 on22do4.si
NCI
CGAP Lu5
873 Up +−_+ +−_+ +−_+ +−_+ 2+ AC Yale
874 Up 1-2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ + 3+ AC Yale AI012139 EST
206590
(Rat
Placenta)
875 Up 1-2+ 1-2+ + + 2-3+ AC Yale
876 Down + 1-2+ 2+ + +−_0 AC Yale AI031728 ow39a05.
xl Soares
parathyroid
tumor
NGHPA
877 Down 2-3+ 2+ 2+ + +− AC Yale
878 Down 2-3+ 2-3+ 2+ 1-2+ 0_+− AC Yale AB002384 human
mRNA for
KIAA0386
gene
879 + +− 0 0 + AC Yale
880 Down 1-2+ +− +− +− 0 AC Yale AI016473 Transciption
Factor
BTF3
881 Down + + 1-2+ + +− AC Yale U82275 Human
immunoglobulin-
like
transcipt
882 Up 2+ 2+ 3+ 3-4+ 4+ AC Yale AI016664 Diamineacetyl
Transferase
883 Down 1-2+ + + + +− AC Yale AA909168 SI Soares
NFLT
GBC.SI
884 Down + +− 0 0 0 AC Yale AI039973 ox88e09.si
Soares
senescent
fibroblasts
885 Up 2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ 2+ 2-3+ AC Yale AI026998 ow41d06.
si Soares
parathyroid
tumor
NB4PA
886 0 +− +−_+ +− 0 AC Yale
887 Up +− 0 0 +− + AC Yale
888 Up 0 0 0 +− + AC Yale
T7 Down 2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ + +− AC Yale
889 Up +− 0 +− +− 1-2+ AC Yale
T8 Down 2-3+ 2+ 2+ 2+ 1-2+ AC Yale G06680 HUMAN
STS
890 Up 2+ 2+ 1-2+ + +− AC Yale
891 Down + + +− 0 0 AC Yale
T76 Down 2-3+ 2+ 2+ 1-2+ +− AC Yale S73591 HUMAN H
HCPA78
HOMOLOG
892 Down 3+ 3+ 3+ 2+ +− AC Yale
893 2+ + 1-2+ 2+ 2+ AC Yale
T98 Down 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ +_+− AC Yale G06788 HUMAN
STS
894 Down 2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ + AC Yale AF039656 Neuronal
tissue-
enrichedacidic
protein
895 Down 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ 2+ +− AC Yale AI016303 ot72d07.si
soares
total Fetus
Nb3hf8
896 Down 2+ 2+ 1-2+ +− 0 AC Yale AC004987 DJ
1173I2O
clone
T81 Up 0 0 0 0 3+ AC Yale AA926999 om26do7
si Soares
NFLTG3c
1s1
T82 Up + + + +− 2-3+ AC Yale AA926999 om26do7.
SI NFL
TG3cSi
T83 Down 2+ 2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ AC Yale
T84 2-3+ 2+ 2-3+ 3+ 2-3+ AC Yale
T85 Down + +− +−_0 +−_0 0 AC Yale O89052 HUMAN
PROTONATPASE
897 Down 2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ + +_+− AC Yale
898 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ AC Yale
899 Up 0 0 +− + 3+ AC Yale
900 Down 1-2+ 1-2+ +− 1-2+ 0 AC Yale
901 Up 1-2+ + 1-2+ 2+ 2-3+ AC Yale
902 Down 2+ + 1-2+ 1-2+ + AC Yale
903 Down 2+ 2+ 3+ 3-4+ +− AC Yale
904 + + +− +− + AC Yale
905 Up 0 +− 0 + 3-4+ AG Yale KO2286 Human
urokinase
gene 3′
end
906 Up 0 0 +− +− 1-2+ AG Yale
T111 +−_+ 2+ +− +− +− AG Yale
907 +− + + 2+ +− AG Yale
908 Down 2+ 2+ 1-2+ 2+ +− AG Yale
909 +− +− + 2+ +−_0 AG Yale
910 Down + 1-2+ 0 +− +− AG Yale AC002091 Genomic
Sequence
Human
17,
complete
sequence
911 Down 2+ 2+ 2+ + AG Yale
T113 Down 2+ 2-3+ 2+ 2+ 1-2+ AG Yale AI039523 ox371002.
si Soares
total fetus
NB22HF8
912 Down +− +− +− AG Yale
913 Down 3+ 3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ 2+ AG Yale
914 Up +− + AG Yale
915 Up + 1-2+ + 1-2+ 2+ AG Yale AI038932 ox96ho8.
xi Soares
senescent
fibroblasts
T115 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ AG Yale
916 Up + + + + 2+ AG Yale AC005038 Homo sapiens
clone
NH
048666122
HTGS
phase 1
917 Down +− +− AG Yale
918 Down + + + + +− AG Yale
919 + + + + AG Yale
920 Down + 2+ + +− +− AG Yale
T116 Down 3-4+ 3-4+ 3+ 3+ 3+ AG Yale M11353 H Histone
H3.3
(human)
T117 Up + + + 2+ 2+ AG Yale
921 Up 1-2+ 2+ + 1-2+ 2-3+ AG Yale AA912471 NCI
CGAP
GC4
Homo
Sapiens
922 Down 1-2+ 2+ + 1-2+ 0-+-? AG Yale
923 Down +− +− +− AG Yale
924 Up 0 0 0 +− 2+ AG Yale
925 Down +− + 0 0 0 AG Yale
926 Down 1-2+ 1-2+ + +−_+ 2+ AG Yale
927 Up + ?+ ?+ 2+ 2+ AG Yale AA917380 0180a04.si
NCI
CGAP
KIDS
928 Up 0 0 0 0 2+ AG Yale AA926999 Homo
Soares
NFL
TGBC si
929 Down + + + AG Yale
930 Up 0 0 0 +− 2+ AG Yale CH29R28 AD000864
051 Homo Sapiens
DNA
from
chromosome
19
cosmid
R28051
931 Down 2+ 2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ + AG Yale
932 Up + + + + 2+ AG Yale
933 Down 4+ 4+ 3+ 3+ 3+ AG Yale m81637 Human
grancalan
mRNA
934 +− + +− AG Yale
935 Down +− + + + AG Yale
936 + +− +− + + AG Yale
937 Up +− +− +− +− + AG Yale
938 Up +− +− +− + 2+ AT Yale
939 Up 0 0 +− +− 2+ AT Yale AA916304 NCI
CGAP
LU5
HOMO
SAPIENS
940 + + 2+ 2-3+ + AT Yale
941 Up + + + + 2-3+ AT Yale
942 Up + + +− 0 1-2+ AT Yale
943 Down +− +− +− + AT Yale
944 Down 2+ + + +− 0 AT Yale
945 Up + +−_+ +−_+ +−_+ 2+ AT Yale AA928171 ON86HO3
SOARES
NFL
TGBC SI
946 Down + + + AT Yale
947 0 0 + 2+ 0 AT Yale
948 Down + + + +− AT Yale
949 Up 0 0 0 0 1-2+ AT Yale AI038932 HOMO
SAPIENS
SOARES
SENESCENT
FIBROBLASTS
950 Down 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ 2-3+ +? AT Yale
951 Up +− +− +− +− + AT Yale
952 Up 0 0 0 +− 1-2+ AT Yale ACC004551 HOMO
SAPIENS
HTGS
PHASE 1
953 Down 1-2+ + 1-2+ +− 0 AT Yale
954 Up + + + 1-2+ 2-3+ AT Yale AI026998 HOMO
SPAIENS
SOARES
PARATHYROID
TUMOR
955 Down + + + + 0 AT Yale
956 Up +− +− +− +− + AT Yale
957 Down 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ + AT Yale
958 Up + + + +−_+ 2+ AT Yale
T123 Up +− +− + 2+ 3+ AT Yale HSO27467 HUMAN
BCL-2
RELATED
(BF1-1)
MRNA
959 + +_+− 2+ + + AT Yale
960 Down 2+ + + + +− AT Yale
961 0 +− 2+ +−_0 +−_0 AT Yale
962 Up 0 0 0 0 2+ AT Yale
T124 Up 3+ 3+ 3+ 3-4+ 3-4+ AT Yale
963 Down 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ + AT GLI
964 +− 1-2+ + + +− AT GLI
965 Up 0 0 +− 2+ 1-2+ AT GLI
966 Down + + + 1-2+ +− AT GLI
967 Down 3+ 3+ 3+ 3+ +− AT GLI M60830 Human
gene
EVI2B#P
968 Down + + 2+ 1-2+ +− AT GLI
969 Up 0 0 0 +− 2+ AT GLI
970 0 0 0 2+ 0 AT GLI
971 Down + + 2+ 1-2+ +− AT GLI
972 Down + + + + AT GLI
973 Up + AT GLI
974 Up + + 2+ 3+ 2+ CA Yale
975 + +− 1-2+ 2+ ? CA Yale GBM77693 HUMAN
DIAMINE
ACETYLTRANSFERASE
976 1-2+ 1-2+ 2-3+ 3+ ? CA Yale Z14136 HOMO
SAPIENS
GENE
SPERMIDINE/
SPERMINE
N1-
ACETYLTRANSFERASE
T132 CA
T133 CA
977 Up + + 1-2+ 2-3+ 1-2+ CA Yale
T135 CA
978 Down 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ CA GLI G05563 Human
STS WI-
7246
979 Down + + + + CA GLI
980 + CA GLI
981 Down + + + + CA GLI 473168 Human
cosmid
LUCA22
982 + CA GLI M55542 Human
granulyte
binding
M55542
protein
Isoform I
983 + CA GLI
984 2+ 2+ 3+ 3-4+ 2+ CC Yale HS167A14 Z94721
HUMAN
DNA SEQ-
PAC167A14
CHROM6927
T139 Up + +− + 2+ CC GLI
985 Down + + + 2+ +− CC Yale
T140 Up + + + + 2+ CC GLI
986 Down 2+ 2+ 1-2+ 1-2+ +− CC Yale AI015836 0V51H11.
SI
SOARES
TESTIS
NHT
HOMO
SAPIENS
987 2-3+ 2+ 2+ 3-4+ 3+ CC Yale

TABLE 2
Cln Sequence+HZ,1/32
846 1 TCTCAGTGAG GTGAGATCAC ACCACTGCAC TCCAACTGGG
CGACAGAGCA
51 AG
854 1 CACTTTCCCC AAATTCTTTT GCCATAGTTC ACTCTCTACT
GATAAGGCCA
51 C
855 1 GGGAAAGTGG TGGGGTGGTG AGGGTCAATG TGCAGAAAAT
CGATGTAACT
51 TGTAATACAG TTGAGTCAAC TGTGTGTTCA CAACAACTCT
GAGAGTTAAC
101 ACCATTTCTA C
856 1 ATCTAAATAT TTTTCATACC GAGTTATTAA GGAGTCAGTA
GTCTGTGCTA
51 CAATGCTGCA AAAAGCATCA CGTGGAAGAA TGGGAACTAT
GCGTACTTTA
101 TGAAGTGATG TATAACACAA TGAACTCTGT TTTACAACTA
CAGTGCTGCA
151 TTCAATTATC TTCCAT
859 1 AAGCTCTGTA TACAAAAGTT ATTTATTTAG ATGTTCGAGG
CATGTCTCTC
51 CTCACCTGTA AACTAACTGT TTTATAACAG CTTGTATCAC
ATGTGTGAAG
101 TTAATGAATG TAATACTCCA ACAAGCCATT CATCAGATTG
GCCAACAGCT
151 AGGATACAGT TAAATAATGG CGACCAGGTT GACAAGTCAT
AATTGCGGTT
201 TGGGGGACCG TAGTTGCACC TCACCTAGAC CAACGTACGC
ATGGCACTCG
251 ACCCAGGCGA ACAAAATTAA T
863 1 TTTCTCAAGA AGAGATAAGA ATGAAAAGTC ATAGAACACA
TCATGGAGGA
51 CCTGGACACA AATGCAGACA AGCAGCTGAG CTTCGAGGAG
TTCATCATGC
101 TGATGGCGAG GCTAACCTGG GCCTCCCACG AGAAGATGCA
CGAGGGTGAC
151 GATGGCCCTG GCCACCACCA TAAGCCAGGC CTCGGGGAGG
GCACCCCCTA
201 AGACCACAGT GGACAAGATC ACAGTGGCCA CGGACACGGC
CACAGTCATG
251 GTGGCCACGG CCACAGCCAC TAATCAGGAG GCCAGGCCAC
CCTGCCTCTA
301 CCCAACCAGG GCCCCGGGGC CTGTTATGTC AAACTGTCTT
GGCTGTGGGG
866 1 NGATCTTTCT AGGAGGGAGA CACTGGCCNC TCAAATCGTC
CAGCGACCTT
51 CCTCATCCAC CCCATCCCTC CCCAGTTCAT TGCACTTTGA
TTAGCAGCGG
101 AACAAGGAGT CAGACATTTT AAGATGGTGG CAGTAGAGGC
TATGGACAGG
151 GCATGCCACG TGGGCTCATA TGGGGCTGGG AGTAGTTGTC
TTTCCTGGCA
201 CTAACGTTGA GCCCCTGGAG GCACTGAAGT GCTTAGTGTA
CTTGGAGTAT
251 TGGGGTCTGA CCCCAAACAC CTTCCAGCTC CTGTAACATA
CTGGCCTGGA
301 CTGTTTTCTC TCGGCTCCCC ATGTGTCCTG GTTCCCGTTT
CTCCACCTAG
351 ACTGTGAACC TCTCGAGGGC AGGGACCACA CCCTGTACTG
TTCTGTGTCT
401 TTCACAGCTC CTCCCACAAT GCTGAATATA CAGCAGGTGC
TCAATAAATG
451 ATTCT
871 1 GCAAGTGTGT TGTGTTACAG TGTCACAACA CCGAG
872 1 GATCTCTCCC TACGCAAAAC GTATTGTAGT GAAAGGGTCT
TCTTTACTAC
51 CTTAATAAAA CAGCTAGTGT G
874 1 GATCTAAATA CAAAGGATAT ACAGTCTTGA ATCTAAAATA
ATTTGCTAAC
51 TATTTTGATT CTTCAGAGAG AACTACTA
876 1 GATCTAGTCC GGACATGCTG TGTATATTGT AACGTTAAAT
GAAAAAAGAA
51 CCCCCCTTTG TATTATAGTC ATGCGGTCTT ATGTATGATA
AACAGTTG
878 1 GATCTTTTGT AGTCACCTCT GTATCTTATG TCTGGTTGAG
GGGTGCTTTT
51 ACTTGTCTGG CATTTGCATT CAATGATCTT TCAGTCATGT
CAGTTAGACT
101 AAAAATTATT TCTG
880 1 CCCAAGCCCC TTGGACACTG CAGCTCTTTT CAGTTTTTGC
TTACACACAA
51 TTCATTCTTT GCAGCTAATT AAGCCGAAGA AGCGTGGGAA
TCAAGTTTGG
101 AACAGAGATT AAAAAAGTTC TT
881 1 GCTCTGGAGG ACAATCCAGG AACTACATTA CCTGGACTGT
ATGCTGGTCA
51 TTTCTACAGA CAGCATTCAG TATTTGAGTG TACGGTAACT
GTCTGGGGTG
101 ATTCCTATAA GATCATTATA CTG
882 1 GATCTTTCTC CTTGAATATC TTTCGATAAA CAACAAGGTG
GTGTGATCTT
51 AATATATTTG AAAAAAACTT CATTCTCGTG AGTCATTTAA
ATGTGTACAA
101 TGTACACACT GGTACTTAGA GTTTCTGTTT GATTCTTTTT
TAATAAACTA
151 C
883 1 TGTCACTCAT GCCCTGGGAC TGCTTCTCCA GCCAGGCGGG
CGCCATACGT
51 CCCACACTAG TGAAGGTCAA TGTCTCAGAA CAACACCTCT
AT
884 1 GATCTGGCCT GTTCCTGCGT CTGCGGAGCA GGCCTTGTCT
CCCAGCTATC
51 TATAACCTTA CCTAGAGTGT CGACTTGTGG GTTCCTGTTG
CTGAGACTTC
101 CTGGATGGAG CCGCCCTCAC CGCCGGACCC GTAGCACTGC
GCGGAACTGT
151 GTCCAATAAA GT
885 1 GATCTGATTT GCTAGTTCTT CCTTGTAGAG TTATAAATGG
AAAGATTACA
51 CTATCTGATT AATAGTTTCT TCATACTCTG CATATAATTT
GTGGCTGCAG
101 AATATTGTAA TTTGTTGCAC ACTATGTAAC AAAACAACTG
AAGATATGTT
151 TAATAAATAT TGTACT
894 1 GATCTTTATG AGAGCAGTAT TTTCTGTGTT TTCTTTTTAA
TTTACAGCCT
51 TTCTTATTTT GATATTTTTT TAATGTTGTG GATGAATGCC
AGCTTTCAGA
101 CAGAGCCCAC TTAGCTTGTC CACATGGATC TCAATGCCAA
TCCTCCATTC
151 TTCCTCTCCA GATATTTTTG GGAGTGACAA ACATTCTCTC
ATCCTACTTA
201 GCCTACCTAG ATTTCTCATG ACGAGTTAAT GCATGTCCGT
GGTTGGGTGC
251 ACCTGTAGTT CTGTTTATTG GTCA
895 1 GATCTAAGTT AGTCCAAAAG CTAAATGATT TAAAGTCAAG
TTGTAATGCT
51 AGGCATAAGC ACTCTATAAT ACATTAAATT ATAGGCCGAG
CAATTAGGGA
101 ATGTTTCTGA AACATTAAAC TTGTATTTAT GTCACTAAAA
TTCTAACACA
151 AACTTAAAAA ATGTGTCTCA TACATATGCT GTACTAGGCT
TCATCATGCA
201 TTTCTAAATT TGTGTATGAT TTGAATATAT GAAAGAATTT
ATACACGAGT
251 GTTATTTAAA ATTATTAAAA ATAAATGTA
896 1 GATCTTATAG GCCTGTCTCA TCAGGTTGGT GTCAGCCCAG
CTAGGATTAG
51 GCAGAATTGG GTGGGGGCTG TAGTGCACTT TTGGCACAGC
ATGTACCTGT
101 CTGACTAATT CTCTGTCTTT TCTTTCCTGT TGCAATTCAT
GGGTCTTAGC
151 ATCTTCTGAA TGGTGTTTAG TAGGTCATCC TGTTGATTTC
CTGCTAGGGA
201 GTAGCATACT CTGGCTCTGT ACCACTGGCC AAGGGACTTA
AGGATAGATG
251 AAGGGCTGCA GTTTTGTTAA ATGGAACAAT ATGAAGAGA
T10 1 GATCTTTCTC CTTGAGTATC TTTCGATAAA CAACAAAGTG
3 GTGTGATCTT
51 AATATATTTG AAAAAAACTT CATTCTCGTG AGTCATTTAA
ATGTGTACAA
101 TGTACACACT GGTACTTAGA GTTTCTGTTT GATTCTTTTT
TAATAAACTA
151 C
T10 1 GATCTCTGCT CATAGAATGC ATGGGGAGCC TTCCAGCTCA
4 CTCTCCCTGA
51 GGACTGGCTT GACAGGGGCT ATGGGTTTGC TTTGG
T10 1 GATCTGCGCT TCCAGAGCGC AGCTATCGGT GCTTTGCAGG
5 AGGCAAGTGA
51 GGCCTATCTG GTTGGCCTTT TTGAAGACAC CAACCTGTGT
GCTATCCATG
101 CCAAACGTGT AACAATTATG CCAAAAGACA TCCAGCTAGC
ACGCCGCATA
151 CGTGGAGAAC GTGCTTAAGA ATCCACTATG ATGGGAAACA
T10 1 GATCTAAATG TGAACAGTTT ACTAATGCAC TACTGAAGTT
7 TAAATCTGTG
51 GCACAATCAA TGTAAGCATG GGGTTTGTTT CTCTAAATTG
ATTTGTAATC
101 TGAAATTACT GAACAACTCC TATTCCCATT TTTGCTAAAC
TCAATTTCTG
151 GTTTTGGTAT ATATCCATTC CAGCTTAATG CCTCTAATTT
TAATGCCAAC
201 AAAATTGGTT GTAATCAAAT TTTAAAATAA TAATAATTTG
GC
T76 1 GCCTTTTCGA TAGTTTCGGG TCAGGTAAAA ATGGCCTCCT
GGCGTAAGCT
51 TTTCAAGGTT TTTTGGAGGC TTTTTGTAAA TTGTGATAGG
AACTTTGGAC
101 CTTGAACTTA CGTATCATGT GGAGAAGAGC CAATTTAACA
AACTAGGAAG
151 ATGAAAAGGG AAATTGTGGC CAAAACTTTG GGAAAAGGAG
GTTCTTAAAA
201 TCAGTGTTTC CCCTTT
T8 1 GATCTATGCA CAAGAACCCC TTTACCCCAT GACCAACATC
GCAGACACAT
51 GTGCTGGCCA CCTGCTGAGC CCCAAGTGGA ACGAGACAAG
CAGCCCTTAG
101 CCCTTCCCCT CTGCAGCTTC CAGGCTGGCG TGCAGCATCA
GCATCCCTAG
151 AAAGCCATGT GCAGCCACCA GTCCATTGGG CAGGCAGATG
TTCCTAATAA
201 AGCT
T81 1 GATCTTTCCT CCTGGTTACT GTGAAGCCTG TTGGTTTGCT
GCTGTCGTTT
51 TTGAGGAGGG CCCATGGGGG TAGGAGCAGT TGAACCTGGG
AACAAACCTC
101 ACTTGAGCTG TGCCTAGACA ATGTGAATTC CTGTGTTGCT
AACAGAAGTG
151 GCCTGTAAGC TCCTGTGCTC CGGAGGGAAG CATTTCCTGG
TAGGCTTTGA
201 TTTTTCTGTG TGTTAAAGAA ATTCAATCTA CTCATGATGT
GTTATGCATA
251 AAACATTTCT GGAACATGGA TTTGTGTTCA CCTTAAATGT
GAAAATAAAT
301 CCTA
T82 1 ATCTTTCCTC CTGGTTACTG TGAAGCCTGT TGGTTTGCTG
CTGTCGTTTT
51 TGAGGAGGGC CCATGGGGGT AGGAGCAGTT GAACCTGGGA
ACAAACCTCA
101 CTTGAGCTGT GCCTAGACAA TGTGAATTCC TGTGTTGCTA
ACAGAAGTGG
151 CCTGTAAGCT CCTGTGCTCC GGAGGGAAGC ATTTCCTGGT
AGGCTTTGAT
201 TTTTCTGTGT GTTAAAGAAA TTCAATCTAC TCATGATGTG
TTATGCATAA
251 AACATTTCTG GAACATGGAT TTGTGTTCAC CTTAAATGTG
AAAATAAATC
301 CTATTTTCTA TG
T85 1 GATCTTTGGC AGCGCCATTG GACTCTTTGG GGTCATCGTC
GCAATTCTTC
51 ATACCTCCAG AGTGAAGATG GGTGACTAGA TGATATGTGT
GGGTGGGGCC
101 GTGCCTCACT TTTATTTATT GCTGGTTTTC CTGGGACAGC
TGGAGCTGTG
151 TCCCTTAACC TTTCAGAGGC TTGGTGTTCA GGGCCCTCCC
TGCACTCCCC
201 TCTTGCTGCG TGTTGATTTG GAGGCACTGC AGTCCAGGCC
GAGTCCTCAG
251 TGCGGGGAGC AGGCTGCTGC TGCTGACTCT GTGCAGCTGC
GCACCTGTGT
301 CCCCCACCTC CACCCTCAAC CCATCTTCCT AGTGTTTGTG
AAATAAACTT
351 GGTAT
T98 1 GATCTTCCAC GTCTCCATCT CAGTACACAA TCATTTAATA
TTTCCCTGTC
51 TTACCCCTAT TCAAGCAACT AGAGGCCAGA AAATGGGCAA
ATTATCACTA
101 ACAGGTCTTT GACTCAGGTT CCAGTAGTTC ATTCTAATGC
CTAGATTCTT
151 TTGTGGTTGT TGCTGGCCCA ATGAGTCCCT AGTCACATCC
CCTGCCAGAG
201 GGAGTTCTTC TTTTGTGAGA GACACTGTAA ACGACACAAG
AGAACAAGAA
251 TAAAA
933 1 TTATATATTT TTCTTAAATA TGTTTTATTG TCTTCTCTAA
GCAAAAAGTT
51 CTTAATAAAC ATAGTATTTC TCTCTGCGTC CTATTTCATT
AGTGAAGACA
101 TAGTTCACCT AAAATGGCAT CCTGCTCTGA ATCTAGACTT
TTTAGAAATG
151 GCATATGTTT TTGATGATAT GTCAACATTC AAAATAGTCC
TAATTAAATT
201 GTTGGTTAAA TGTAATGTCA ACTCTTTATA AACTTAAATA
TAAACAAGTA
251 ATTAACCACT CTAAGTAATA AAACACATTT CACCTGTGTT
CTGAGTGTA
967 1 ATGAATCCTT GCCACCTCCA CCTGCAGAAC TGTTATAAAT
ATTACAACTT
51 GCTTTTTAGC TGATCTTCCA TCCTCAAATG ACTCTTTTTT
CTTTATATGT
101 TAACATATAT AAAATGGCAA CTGATAGTCA ATTTTGATTT
TTATTCAGGA
151 ACTATCTGAA ATCTGCTCAG AGCCTATGTG CATAGATGAA
ACTTTTTTTT
201 AAAAAAAGTT ATTTAACAGT AATCTATTTA CTAATTATAG
TACCTATCTT
251 TAAAGTATAG TACATTTTAC ATATGTAAAT GGTATGTTTC
AATAATTTAA
301 GAACTCTGAA ACAATCTACA TATACTTATT ACCCAGTACA
GTTTTTTTTC
351 CCCTGAAAAG CTGTGTATAA AATTATGGTG AATAAACTTT
TATGTTTCCA
401 TTTCAAAGAC CAGGGTGGAG AGGAATAAGA GACTAAGTAT
ATGCTTCAAG
451 TTTTAAATTA ATACCTCAGG TATTAAAATA AATATTCCAA
GTTTGTGGGA
501 AATGGGGAGA TTAAAATG
978 1 TTATGTGGCC TTAGGTAGCT GGTTGTACAT CTTTCCCTAA
ATCGATCCAT
51 GTTACCACAT AGTAGTTTTA GTTTAGGATT CAGTAACAGT
GAAGTGTTTA
101 CTATGTGCAA CGGTATTGAA GTTCTTATGA CCACAGATCA
TCAGTACTGT
151 TGTCTCATGT AATGCTAAAA CTGAAATGGT CCGTGTTTGC
ATTGTTAAAA
201 ATGATGTGTG AAATAGAATG AGTGCTATGG TGTTGAAAAC
TGCAGTGTCC
251 GTTATGAGTG CCAAAAATCT GTCTTGAAGG CAGCTACACT
TTGAAGTGGT
301 CTTTGAATAC TTTTAATAAA TTTATTTTGA TA
981 1 TAGGTGAACC CTTATTCTGC AGGGTTCTCC CTCCCACCTT
AAAGAAGTTC
51 CCCTTATGTG GGTTGCCTGG TGAATGGCCT TCCTTCCCGC
CAGAGGGCTT
101 GTGAACAGAC CGGAGAGGAC AGTGGATTGT TTATACTCCA
GTGTACATAG
151 TGTAATGTAG CGTGTTTACA TGTGTAGCCT ATGTTGTGGT
CCATCAGCCC
201 CTCACATTCC TAGGGGTTTG AGATGCTGTA CGTGGTATGT
GACACCAAAG
251 CCACCTCTGT CATTTGTTGT GATGTCTTTT CTTGGCAAAA
GCCTTGTGTA
301 TATTTGTATA TTACACATTT GTACAGAATT TTGGAAGATT
TTCAGTCTAG
351 TTGCCAAATC TGGCTCCTTT ACAAAAG
982 1 AGAATCTCTT ATGTTCTCAG AGGAAGGTGG AAGAAACCAT
GGGCAGGAGT
51 AGGAATTGAG TGATAAACAA TTGGGCTAAT GAAGAAAACT
TCTCTTATTG
101 TTCAGTTCAT CCAGATTATA ACTTCAATGG GACACTTTAG
ACCATTAGAC
151 AATTGACACT GGATTAAACA AATTCACATA ATGCCAAATA
CACAATGTAT
201 TTATAGCAAC GTATAATTTG CAAAGATGGA CTTTAAAAGA
TGCTGTGTAA
251 CTAAACTGAA ATAATTCAAT TACTTATTAT TTAGAATGTT
AAAGCTTATG
301 ATAGTCTTTT CTAATTCTTA ACACTCATAC TTGAAATCTT
TCTGAGTTTC
351 CCCAGAAGAG AATATGGGAT TTTTTTTGAC ATTTTTGACT
CATTTAATAA
401 TGCTCTTGTG TTTACCTAGT ATATGTAGAC TTTGTCTTAT
GTGTCAAAAG
451 TCCTAGGAAA GTGGTTGATG TTTCTTATAG CAATTAAAAA
TTATT
905 1 ATCTCAGTGA GCTGAGATCA CACCACTGCA CTCCAACTGG
GCGACAGAGC
51 AAGA
910 1 GATCTGTAAT TCAGGTGTTT TCTGTACAGC CATACGTAGA
TAATGAAGCC
51 AAAAGGCTTT TAATTACACC ATGGCCTAAA ATAAATTCAT
CA
915 1 TATTTTTCAG CTGAGTTATT AGGGAGTCAT TATTCTGTGG
TACAATGCTG
51 CAAAAAGCAT CATGTGGAAG AATGGGAACT ATGCTTACAT
TATGAAGTGA
101 TGTATAACAC AATGCAAATC TG
916 1 GATCTTTTTT CATTAAAAAA TGTTCAATTA TCAGGCCGGG
TGCAGTGGGG
51 CTCATGCCTG TAATCCCAAC ACTTTGGGAG GCCGATGCAG
GCGGATCACT
101 AGGTCAGCAG ATCGAGACCA TCCTGGCTAA CACAGTGAAA
CCT
921 1 GATCTTTATT TTTAGCCATG CACTGTTGTG AGGAAAATTA
CCTGTCTTGA
51 CTGCCATGTG TTCATCATCT TAAGTATTGT AAGCTGCTAT
GTATGGATTT
101 AAACCGTAAT CATATCTTTT TCCTATCTAT CTGAGGCACT
GGTGGAATAA
151 AGAACCTGTA TATTTTACTT TGTTGCAGAT AGTCTTGCCG
CATCTTGGCA
201 AGTTGCAGAG A
927 1 GATCTTCGTG AAGACCTGAC TGGTAAGACC ATCACCCTCG
AGGTGGAGCC
51 CAGTGACACC ATCGAGAATG TCAAGGCAAA GATCCAAGAT
AAGGAAGGCA
101 TCCCTCCTGA TCAGCAGAGG TTGATCTTTG CTGGGAAACA
GCTGGAAGAT
151 GGACGCACCC TGTCTGACTA CAACATCCAG AAAGAGTCCA
CTCTGCACTT
201 GGTCCTGCGC TTGAGGGGGG GTGTCTAAGT TTCCCCTTTT
AAGGTTTCAA
251 CAAATTTCAT TGCACTTTCC TTTCAATAAA GTTG
928 1 GATCTTTCCT CCTGGTTACT GTGAAGCCTG TTGGTTTGCT
GCTGTCGTTT
51 TTGAGGAGGG CCCATGGGGG TAGGAGCAGT TGAACCTGGG
AACAAACCTC
101 ACTTGAGCTG TGCCTAGACA ATGTGAATTC CTGTGTTGCT
AACAGAAGTG
151 GCCTGTAAGC TCCTGTGCTC CGGAGGGAAG CATTTCCTGG
TAGGCTTTGA
201 TTTTTCTGTG TGTTAAAGAA ATTCAATCTA CTCATGATGT
GTTATGCATA
251 AAACATTTCT GGAACATGGA TTTGTGTTCA CCTTAAATGT
GAAAATAAAT
930 1 GATCTTTCGG GTTCTCTCTC CTAACTCAGC TCTTCGTTCC
CAGAAACCCA
51 GATGTAATCC CCCTACGTGG TGCTTGGGGC ATCCCGATAC
CATCTCAGTA
101 AATCTCCTAC ATTGGCCTCC TCACCCTCCC CGGGACCCAC
ACCCTTCAGG
151 TCCTCACCCT GAGACAGGAG GGACCCTCTG AGATCAGGGA
CCCTTAGGTC
201 TCACTGGTCT CTGATTCATA GCTCAACTGG GCCCCCAGTT
CCATACCCCA
251 GCATTCCCGG TCACTCCCTC CCTAATCTGA GCATCACTCA
AGCTCTTTAT
301 TAAACTC
939 1 ATCTCTCTCC CTACGCAAAA CCCTATTGTA GTAAAAAAGT
CTTCTTTACT
51 ATCTTAATAA AACAGATATT GTG
945 1 ATCTATTCTT GTAGATTTTT TTTGTGTGGG TCTATGTTTC
ATTCATCTGC
51 TTTCAGGCTG GATTTATAAC AAGCAGAACT TTTAAAACG
949 1 GATCTAAATA TTTTTCAGCT GAGTTATTAC GGAGTCATTA
TTCTGTGGTA
51 CAATGCTGCA AAAAGCATCA TGTGGAAGAA TGGGAACTAT
GCTTACTTTA
101 TGAAGTGATG TATAACACAA TGAAA
952 1 CTACCCCGTG ACTCAGTTAC CTCCCACTGG GTCCCTCCCA
CATCATGTGG
51 GAATTGTAGG AGCTACAATT CAAGATGAGA TTTGGATGGG
GTCACAGCCA
101 AACCATATCA CTGAGGTATC AAGGAGATTC TT
954 1 GATCTGATTT GCTAGTTCTT CCTTGTAGAG TTATAAATGG
AAAGATTACA
51 CTATCTGATT AATAGTTTCT TCATACTCTG CATATAATTT
GTGGCTGCAG
101 AATATTGTAA TTTGTTGCAC ACTATGTAAC AAAACAACTG
AAGATATGTT
151 TAATAAATAT TGTACTTATT G
975 1 NGATCTTTCT CCTTGAATAT CTTTCGATAA ACAACAAGGT
GGTGTGATCT
51 TAATATATTT GAAAAAAACT TCATTCTCGT GAGTCATTTA
AATGTGTACA
101 ATGTACACAC TGGTACTTAG AGTTTCTGTT TGATTCTTTT
TTAATAAA
976 1 GATCTGCTAG AAGATGGTTT TGGAGAGCAC CCCTTTTACC
ACTGCCTGGT
51 TGCAGAAGTG CCGAAAGAGC ACTGGACTCC GGAAGGTAAC
CCCTCGCCCT
101 TTCCAGAAGC CAGAGAGACC AAGTGTTATG TAAGAAGTAG
TGTCGGCTGT
151 GTAGAACCAC TGACTACACA GGCCGAAGTT ACTGAGAACT
TGGACAGAAA
201 AAATAGCCAG CAAGTGTT
984 1 CATTCACACA TTTAACCTCC TTCCATACCA AATCTT
986 1 GATCTGGACA GCAGAATGTT ATAACGCAAG TTCATGTGTT
GCTCCCAACT
51 CCATTCTCTT TTCTCTCGTG CAACCAGTTT GCCCATTCTC
TTCCTATTAC
101 TTGCTC
T11 1 TCAGAGATTT GCAAAGACTC ACGTTTTTGT TGTTTTCTCA
3 TCATTCCATT
51 GTGATACTAA GAAACTAAGA AGCTTAATGA AAAGAAATAA
AATGCCTATG
T11 1 GATCTGCGCT TCCAGAGCGC AGCTATCGGT GCTTTGCAGG
6 AGGCAAGTGA
51 GGCCTATCTG GTTGGCCTTT TTGAAGACAC CAACCTGTGT
GCTATCCATG
101 CCAAACGTGT AACAATTATG CCAAAAGACA TCCAGCTAGC
ACGCCGCATA
151 CGTGGAGAAC GTGCTTAAGA ATCCACTATG ATGGGAAACA
T12 1 GATCTGTGAA ATGCTATCTC TCCTGAAGCA ATACTGTTGA
3 CCAGAAAGGA
51 CACTCCATAT TGTGAAACCG GCCTAATATT TCTGACTGAT
ATGGAAACGA
101 TTGCCAACAC ATACTTCTAC TTTTAAATAA ACAACTTTGA
TGATGTAACT
151 TGACCTTCCA GAGTTATGGA AATTTTGTCC CCATGTAATG
AATAAATTGT
201 ATGTAT

EXAMPLE 4

Production of Expression Profiles Generated from cDNAs Made with RNA Isolated from Neutrophils Isolated from a Subject with a Sterile Inflammatory Disease.

Neutrophils are isolated from normal donor peripheral blood following the LPS-free method or from subjects exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease. RNA is extracted and the gene expression profiles prepared as described in Example 1.

To determine the identity of genes (cDNAs) which are differentially expressed in the neutrophils isolated from a subject exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease, the cDNA profiles prepared from neutrophils from said subject are compared to profiles prepared from neutrophils isolated from the normal donor. Bands which exhibit altered intensities when compared between the gene expression profiles prepared from neutrophils from said subject and profiles prepared from neutrophils isolated from the normal donor are then extracted from the display gel as previously described in Example 1. The isolated fragments are then reamplified using 5′ and 3′ primers, subcloned into pCR-Script (Stratagene) and sequenced using an ABI automated sequencer.

Once sequences are obtained which correspond to the bands of interest, the sequences can be compared to known nucleic acid sequences in the available data bases.

EXAMPLE 5

Method to Identify a Therapeutic or Prophylactic Agent that Modulates the Response of a Granulocyte Population to a Pathogen

The methods set forth in Example 1 offer a powerful approach for identifying therapeutic or prophylactic agents that modulate the expression of neutrophils or other granulocytic cells to a pathogen. For instance, profiles of normal granulocytes and neutrophils or other granulocytes exposed to pathogens such as E. coli, Y. pestis or other pathogenic bacteria are prepared as set forth in Example 1. A profile is also prepared from a granulocyte population that has been exposed to the pathogen in the presence of the agent to be tested. By examining for differences in the intensity of individual bands between the three profiles, agents which up or down regulate genes of interest in the pathogen exposed granulocytes can be identified.

As a specific example, screening for agents which up or down regulate the expression of human pre-B cell enhancing factor (PBEF) can be identified by examining the differences in band intensity between profiles produced from normal granulocytes, granulocytes exposed to the pathogen and granulocytes exposed to the pathogen in the presence of the agent to be tested. As showy in FIG. 4. PBEF is expressed at high levels when exposed to avirulent bacteria, including E. coli K12 and avirulent Y. pestis but is not expressed at high levels in granulocytes exposed to pathogenic Y. pestis. Agents that up regulate PBEF expression as demonstrated by increased band density in the profile produced from granulocytic cells exposed to virulent Y. pestis in the presence of the agent may be useful in modulating the response of neutrophils to bacterial infection.

EXAMPLE 6

Method to Identify a Therapeutic or Prophylactic Agent that Modulates the Expression of Genes in a Granulocyte Cell Population Found in a Subject Having a Sterile Inflammatory Disease.

The methods set forth in Example 4 offer a powerful approach for identifying therapeutic or prophylactic agents that modulate the expression of neutrophils or other granulocytic cells in subjects exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile (non-infectious) inflammatory disease. For instance, gene expression profiles of normal granulocytes and granulocytes from a subject exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease are prepared as set forth in Examples 1 and 4. A profile is also prepared from a granulocyte population from a subject exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease that have been exposed to the agent to be tested. By examining these profiles for differences in the intensity of banid between the three profiles, agents which up or down regulate genes of interest in a granulocytic population from a subject exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease can be identified. Agents that up-regulate a gene or genes that are expressed at abnormally low levels in a granulocytic cell population from a subject exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease compared to a normal granulocytic cell population as well as agents that down regulate a gene or genes that are expressed at abnormally high levels in a granulocytic cell population from a subject exhibiting the symptoms of a sterile inflammatory disease are contemplated.

EXAMPLE 7

Production of Solid Support Compositions Comprising Groupings of Nucleic Acids that Correspond to the Genes whose Expression Levels are Modulated in a Granulocytic Population that has been Exposed to a Pathogen or Nucleic Acids that Correspond to the Genes Whose Expression Levels are Modulated in a Granulocytic Cell Population from a Subject Having a Sterile Inflammatory Disease.

As set forth in Examples 1-4, expression profiles from granulocytic cells exposed to a pathogen or granulocytic cells from a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease yield the identity of genes whose expression levels are modulated compared to normal. quiescent granulocytic cells.

Solid supports can be prepared that comprise immobilized representative groupings of nucleic acids corresponding to the genes or fragments of said genes from granulocytic cells whose expression levels are modulated in response to exposure to a pathogen or in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease. For instance, representative nucleic acids can be immobilized to any solid support to which nucleic acids can be immobilized, such as positively charged nitrocellulose or nylon membranes (see Sambrook et al. (1989) Molecular Cloning: a laboratory manual 2nd. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) as well as porous glass wafers such as those disclosed by Beattie (WO 95/11755). Nucleic acids are immobilized to the solid support by well established techniques, including charge interactions as well as attachment of derivatized nucleic acids to silicon dioxide surfaces such as glass which bears a terminal epoxide moiety. A solid support comprising a representative grouping of nucleic acids can then be used in standard hybridization assays to detect the presence or quantity of one or more specific nucleic acid species in a sample (such as a total cellular mkNA sample or cDNA prepared from said mRNA) which hybridize to the nucleic acids attached to the solid support. Any hybridization methods, reactions, conditions and/or detection means can be used, such as those disclosed by Sambrook et al. (1989) Molecular Cloning: a laboraton, manual 2nd., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Ausbel et al. (1987) Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, Greene Publishing and Wiley-Interscience or Beattie (WO 95/11755).

One of ordinary skill in the art may determine the optimal number of genes that must be represented by nucleic acid fragments immobilized on the solid support to effectively differentiate between samples, e.g. neutrophils exposed to various pathogens or neutrophils isolated from a patient to be tested for a sterile inflammatory disease. Preferably, at least about 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 150, 200, 300, 500, 1000 or more preferably, substantially all of the detectable mRNA species in a cell sample or population will be present in the gene expression profile or array affixed to a solid support. More preferably, such profiles or arrays will contain a sufficient representative number of mRNA species whose expression levels are modulated under the relevant infection, disease, screening, treatment or other experimental conditions. In most instances, a sufficient representative number of such mRNA species will be about 1, 2, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50, 50-75 or 100 in number and will be represented by the nucleic acid molecules or fragments of nucleic acid molecules immobilized on the solid support. For example, nucleic acids encoding all or a fragment of one or more of the known genes or previously reported ESTs that are identified in FIG. 4 and Tables 1 and 2 may be so immobilized. The skilled artisan will be able to optimize the number and particular nucleic acids for a given purpose, i.e., screening for modulating agents, identifying activated granulocytes, etc.

EXAMPLE 9

Method of Diagnosing Exposure of a Subject to a Pathogen.

Expression profiles of RNA expression levels from neutrophils exposed to various bacteria, such as those disclosed in Examples 1 and 3, offer a powerful means to diagnose exposure of a subject to a pathogen. As set forth in Examples 1 and 3, the display patterns generated from cDNAs made with RNA isolated from neutrophils exposed to pathogenic and nonpathogenic E. coli and Y pestis exhibit unique patterns of cDNA species corresponding to neutrophil mRNA species (genes) whose expression levels are modulated in response to contact of the neutrophils with the bacteria. The contacting of neutrophils with different species of pathogens may result in the production of expression profiles that are unique to each pathogen species or strain. These unique expression profiles are useful in diagnosing whether a subject has been exposed to or is infected with a given pathogen.

Briefly, expression profiles are produced as set forth in Example 1 using neutrophil samples exposed to various pathogens, such as pathogenic strains of E. coli, Y. pestis, Staphylococci, Streptococci or any other bacterial species. Neutrophils are then isolated from the subject to be tested for exposure to a pathogen and an expression profile prepared from the subject's neutrophils by the methods set forth in Example 1. The expression profile prepared from the subject neutrophils can then be compared to the expression profiles prepared from neutrophils exposed to the various pathogen species or strains to determine which expression profile most closely matches the expression profile prepared from the subject, thereby, diagnosing exposure of the subject to a pathogen.

EXAMPLE 10

Method of Diagnosing a Sterile Inflammatory Disease in a Subject

Expression profiles of RNA expression levels from neutrophils isolated from a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease, such as those disclosed in Example 4, offer a powerful means to diagnose inflammatory diseases such as psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, glomerulonephritis, asthma, cardiac and renal reperfusion injury, thrombosis, adult respiratory distress syndrome, inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis and periodontal disease. As set forth in Example 4, the gene expression profiles generated from cDNAs made with RNA isolated from neutrophils from subjects having various sterile inflammatory diseases may exhibit unique patterns of cDNA species corresponding to neutrophil mRNA species (genes) whose expression levels are modulated during the inflammatory process. These unique expression profiles are useful in diagnosing whether a subject has a sterile inflammatory disease.

Briefly, expression profiles are produced as set forth in Examples 1 and 4 using neutrophil samples isolated from patients with various sterile inflammatory diseases. Neutrophils are then isolated from the subject to be tested and an expression profile prepared from the subject's neutrophils by the methods set forth in Example 1. The expression profile prepared from the subject neutrophils can then be compared to the expression profiles prepared from neutrophils isolated from patients with various sterile inflammatory diseases to determine which expression profile most closely matches the expression profile prepared from the subject, thereby, diagnosing whether the subject has a sterile inflammatory disease.

It should be understood that the foregoing discussion and examples merely present a detailed description of certain preferred embodiments. It therefore should be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that various modifications and equivalents can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. All articles, patents and texts that are identified above are incorporated by reference in their entirety.

Claims

1. A method to identify a therapeutic or prophylactic agent that modulates the response of a granulocyte population to a pathogen, comprising the steps of:

preparing a first gene expression profile of a quiescent granulocyte population;

preparing a second gene expression profile of a granulocyte population exposed to the pathogen;

treating the exposed granulocyte population with the agent;

preparing a third gene expression profile of the treated granulocyte population;

comparing the first, second and third gene expression profiles; and

identifying agents that modulate the response of a granulocytic population to the pathogen.

2. The method of claim 1, wherein the granulocyte population is selected from the group consisting of a population of neutrophils, basophils and eosinophils.

3. The method of claim 1, wherein the pathogen is selected from the group consisting of bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites.

4. The method of claim 3 wherein the pathogen is selected from the group consisting of Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria.

5. The method of claim 3, wherein the pathogen is selected from the group consisting of Staphylococci, Streptococci, Clostridia, Neisseria, Enterobacteriaceae, Helicobacter, Vibrio, Campylobacter, Pseudomonas, Haemophilus, Bordetella, Mycoplasma, Ureaplasma, Legionella, Spirochetes, Mycobacteria, Actinomyces, Nocardia, Chlamydia, Rickettsia, Coxiella, Ehrilichia, Rochalimaea, Brucella, Yersinia, Fracisella, and Pasteurella.

6. A method to identify a therapeutic agent that modulates the expression of at least one gene in a granulocyte population found in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease; comprising the steps of:

preparing a first gene expression profile of a granulocyte population in a subject having the sterile inflammatory disease;

treating the granulocyte population with the agent;

preparing a second gene expression profile of the treated granulocyte population;

comparing the first and second gene expression profiles with the gene expression profile of a normal granulocyte preparation; and

identifying an agent that modulates the expression of at least one gene whose transcription levels are altered in the granulocyte population of the subject as compared with normal granulocyte population.

7. The method of claim 6, wherein the granulocyte population is selected from the group consisting of a population of neutrophils, basophils and eosinophils.

8. The method of claim 6, wherein the sterile inflammatory disease is selected from the group consisting of psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, glomerulonephritis, asthma, cardiac and renal reperfusion injury, thrombosis, adult respiratory distress syndrome, inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis and periodontal disease.

9. A composition comprising a grouping of nucleic acids that correspond to the genes or fragments of genes whose expression levels are modulated in a granulocyte population that has been exposed to a pathogen affixed to a solid support.

10. A composition comprising a grouping of nucleic acids that correspond to the genes or fragments of genes whose expression levels are modulated in a granulocyte population found in a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease affixed to a solid support.

11. A method of diagnosing exposure of a subject to a pathogen, comprising the steps of:

preparing a first gene expression profile of a granulocyte population from the subject;

comparing the first gene expression profile to a second gene expression profile of a granulocyte population exposed to the pathogen and to a third gene expression profile of a normal granulocyte preparation; and

determining if the subject was exposed to a pathogen.

12. A method of diagnosing a sterile inflammatory disease in a subject, comprising the steps of:

preparing a first gene expression profile of a granulocyte population from the subject;

comparing the first gene expression profile to at least one second gene expression profile from a granulocyte population from a subject having a sterile inflammatory disease and to a third gene expression profile of a normal granulocyte population; and

determining if the subject has a sterile inflammatory disease.

13. The method of claim 12, wherein the sterile inflammatory disease is glomerulo-nephritis.

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