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A serum B-lymphocyte activation signature is a key distinguishing feature of the immune response in sarcoidosis compared to tuberculosis.

Ikhwanuliman PuteraBenjamin SchrijverP Martijn KolijnAstrid C van StigtJosianne C E M Ten BergeHanna IJspeertNicole M A NagtzaamSigrid M A SwagemakersJan A M van LaarRupesh AgrawalSaskia M RombachP Martin van HagenRina La Distia NoraWillem A Dik
Published in: Communications biology (2024)
Sarcoidosis and tuberculosis (TB) are two granulomatous diseases that often share overlapping clinical features, including uveitis. We measured 368 inflammation-related proteins in serum in both diseases, with and without uveitis from two distinct geographically separated cohorts: sarcoidosis from the Netherlands and TB from Indonesia. A total of 192 and 102 differentially expressed proteins were found in sarcoidosis and active pulmonary TB compared to their geographical healthy controls, respectively. While substantial overlap exists in the immune-related pathways involved in both diseases, activation of B cell activating factor (BAFF) signaling and proliferation-inducing ligand (APRIL) mediated signaling pathways was specifically associated with sarcoidosis. We identified a B-lymphocyte activation signature consisting of BAFF, TNFRSF13B/TACI, TRAF2, IKBKG, MAPK9, NFATC1, and DAPP1 that was associated with sarcoidosis, regardless of the presence of uveitis. In summary, a difference in B-lymphocyte activation is a key discriminative immunological feature between sarcoidosis/ocular sarcoidosis (OS) and TB/ocular TB (OTB).
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