Background

Effective treatment requires a correct diagnosis, however for different subgroups of chronic rhinitis patients differentiation on a clinical level is complicated. In the case of non-allergic rhinitis (NAR) that represents a wide spectrum of diseases, we are also faced with a missing mechanistic or molecular diagnosis. Here we present an unbiased transcriptomic approach on nasal epithelial cells that assess expression differences between chronic rhinitis subgroups.

Method

Epithelial cells were obtained from concha inferior biopsies of allergic rhinitis (AR), non-allergic rhinitis (NAR) and healthy controls. Affimetric arrays and were used to determine the expression profiles.

Results

Comparing subgroups of NAR patients with healthy controls three significant differences were observed related to the activation state of genes. Two classes of genes were significantly up-regulated in non-allergic rhinitis. The first class is related to interferon (INF) signalling and the second class is related to ‘epithelial growth factor receptor’ (EGFR) signalling pathway. Finally there was a significant difference in cold-induced RNA binding protein (CIRBP) that was activated in NAR and de-activated in healthy. These three path could well be related as CIRBP is able to affect ERK activity downstream of EGFR resulting in increased IFN-levels.

Conclusion

Assessing differences between chronic rhinitis subgroups using a completely unbiased approach has revealed a novel profile in non-allergic rhinitis. This profile seems linked to the way nasal airway epithelial cells respond to cold air. The last observation is very relevant because cold-dry air provocation is the golden standard to assess nasal hyperreactivity. The increased activity of the EGFR and INF-pathways in turn might well explain the symptomatology in these patients.