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Dive into the research topics where Serena Sanna is active.

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Featured researches published by Serena Sanna.


Nature Immunology | 2018

Integration of multi-omics data and deep phenotyping enables prediction of cytokine responses

Olivier B. Bakker; Raúl Aguirre-Gamboa; Serena Sanna; Marije Oosting; Sanne P. Smeekens; Martin Jaeger; Maria Zorro; Urmo Võsa; Sebo Withoff; Romana T. Netea-Maier; Hans J. P. M. Koenen; Irma Joosten; Ramnik J. Xavier; Lude Franke; Leo A. B. Joosten; Vinod Kumar; Cisca Wijmenga; M.G. Netea; Yang Li

The immune response to pathogens varies substantially among people. Whereas both genetic and nongenetic factors contribute to interperson variation, their relative contributions and potential predictive power have remained largely unknown. By systematically correlating host factors in 534 healthy volunteers, including baseline immunological parameters and molecular profiles (genome, metabolome and gut microbiome), with cytokine production after stimulation with 20 pathogens, we identified distinct patterns of co-regulation. Among the 91 different cytokine–stimulus pairs, 11 categories of host factors together explained up to 67% of interindividual variation in cytokine production induced by stimulation. A computational model based on genetic data predicted the genetic component of stimulus-induced cytokine production (correlation 0.28–0.89), and nongenetic factors influenced cytokine production as well.The immune response to pathogens varies substantially among humans. Netea and colleagues show that integration of multi-omics data and deep phenotyping enables prediction of cytokine production in responses to pathogens.


Nature Genetics | 2018

Author Correction: Individual variations in cardiovascular-disease-related protein levels are driven by genetics and gut microbiome

Daria V. Zhernakova; Trang H. Le; Alexander Kurilshikov; Biljana Atanasovska; Marc Jan Bonder; Serena Sanna; Annique Claringbould; Urmo Võsa; Patrick Deelen; Lude Franke; Rudolf A. de Boer; Folkert Kuipers; M.G. Netea; Marten H. Hofker; Cisca Wijmenga; Alexandra Zhernakova; Jingyuan Fu

In the version of this paper originally published, there was a typographical error. In the Discussion, the sentence “In line with this, Ep-CAM-deficient mice exhibited increased intestinal permeability and decreased ion transport60, which may contribute to CVD susceptibility risk59” originally read iron instead of ion transport. This error has been corrected in the HTML, PDF and print versions of the article.


Nature Genetics | 2018

Individual variations in cardiovascular-disease-related protein levels are driven by genetics and gut microbiome

Daria V. Zhernakova; Trang H. Le; Alexander Kurilshikov; Biljana Atanasovska; Marc Jan Bonder; Serena Sanna; Annique Claringbould; Urmo Võsa; Patrick Deelen; Lude Franke; Rudolf A. de Boer; Folkert Kuipers; M.G. Netea; Marten H. Hofker; Cisca Wijmenga; Alexandra Zhernakova; Jingyuan Fu

Despite a growing body of evidence, the role of the gut microbiome in cardiovascular diseases is still unclear. Here, we present a systems-genome-wide and metagenome-wide association study on plasma concentrations of 92 cardiovascular-disease-related proteins in the population cohort LifeLines-DEEP. We identified genetic components for 73 proteins and microbial associations for 41 proteins, of which 31 were associated to both. The genetic and microbial factors identified mostly exert additive effects and collectively explain up to 76.6% of inter-individual variation (17.5% on average). Genetics contribute most to concentrations of immune-related proteins, while the gut microbiome contributes most to proteins involved in metabolism and intestinal health. We found several host–microbe interactions that impact proteins involved in epithelial function, lipid metabolism, and central nervous system function. This study provides important evidence for a joint genetic and microbial effect in cardiovascular disease and provides directions for future applications in personalized medicine.Genome-wide and metagenome-wide association study of 92 cardiovascular-diseases-related proteins identifies genetic and microbial factors that explain 76.6% of inter-individual variation, highlighting the role of gut microbiome in cardiovascular disease.


Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2018

Integration of whole-exome sequencing and RNA sequencing of intestinal biopsies in inflammatory bowel disease identifies inflammation-dependent effects

Ruggero Barbieri; W. Uniken Venema; A. Vich Vila; Yang Li; Lude Franke; F. van Dijk; N. De Klein; Morris A. Swertz; Serena Sanna; Michiel D. Voskuil; Manuel A. Rivas; Ramnik J. Xavier; Mark J. Daly; Eleonora A. Festen; Rinse K. Weersma

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Lude Franke

University Medical Center Groningen

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Cisca Wijmenga

University Medical Center Groningen

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Alexander Kurilshikov

University Medical Center Groningen

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Alexandra Zhernakova

University Medical Center Groningen

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Annique Claringbould

University Medical Center Groningen

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Biljana Atanasovska

University Medical Center Groningen

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Daria V. Zhernakova

University Medical Center Groningen

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Folkert Kuipers

University Medical Center Groningen

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