Systemic lupus erythematous (SEL) is a heterogeneous, systemic autoimmune disorder which is defined by its
autoantibody pattern. Transcriptomic data analysis has shown pathways and immune system responses associated with SLE. Eight up-regulated genes (SOCE, MMP9, CXCL8, JUN, IL1B, NFKBIA, TNF and FOS) have been
examined with four interactions among different pathways. These genes are associated with SNPs which have
been identified through two datasets from SLE genome-wide association studies (GWAS). In this investigation,
the GWAS results were integrated with pathway analysis of transcriptomes and several genes were detected with
known SLE-related variations (TYK2, C5, SH2B, IRF5, IL2RA, STAT4, FCGR2A, IL7R, LYN, HLA-DRB and
TNFAIP3). Pathway-based analysis on the Wikipathway Human Collection allowed the identification of prioritized variants in the relevant pathways, such as thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) signaling pathway linked
to LYN, IL7R, STAT4 and rs7574865. Analysis of existing transcriptomes and GWAS data identified eight upregulated candidate genes with more than four relationships among the different pathways associated with SNPs
to pinpoint the relevant loci linked to SLE. The results of this investigation have expanded the number of
candidate genes related to SLE and have highlighted possible pathways and GWAS-based methods for gene
detection. Identification of the fundamental genes would assist in revealing the mechanisms responsible for SLE