CAR directs T cell adaptation to bile acids in the small intestine
Bile acids are lipid-emulsifying metabolites synthesized in hepatocytes and maintained in vivo through enterohepatic circulation between the liver and small intestine 1 . As detergents, bile acids can cause toxicity and inflammation in enterohepatic tissues 2 . Nuclear receptors maintain bile acid h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2021-05, Vol.593 (7857), p.147-151 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Bile acids are lipid-emulsifying metabolites synthesized in hepatocytes and maintained in vivo through enterohepatic circulation between the liver and small intestine
1
. As detergents, bile acids can cause toxicity and inflammation in enterohepatic tissues
2
. Nuclear receptors maintain bile acid homeostasis in hepatocytes and enterocytes
3
, but it is unclear how mucosal immune cells tolerate high concentrations of bile acids in the small intestine lamina propria (siLP). CD4
+
T effector (T
eff
) cells upregulate expression of the xenobiotic transporter MDR1 (encoded by
Abcb1a
) in the siLP to prevent bile acid toxicity and suppress Crohn’s disease-like small bowel inflammation
4
. Here we identify the nuclear xenobiotic receptor CAR (encoded by
Nr1i3
) as a regulator of MDR1 expression in T cells that can safeguard against bile acid toxicity and inflammation in the mouse small intestine. Activation of CAR induced large-scale transcriptional reprogramming in T
eff
cells that infiltrated the siLP, but not the colon. CAR induced the expression of not only detoxifying enzymes and transporters in siLP T
eff
cells, as in hepatocytes, but also the key anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10. Accordingly, CAR deficiency in T cells exacerbated bile acid-driven ileitis in T cell-reconstituted
Rag1
−/−
or
Rag2
−
/
−
mice, whereas pharmacological activation of CAR suppressed it. These data suggest that CAR acts locally in T cells that infiltrate the small intestine to detoxify bile acids and resolve inflammation. Activation of this program offers an unexpected strategy to treat small bowel Crohn’s disease and defines lymphocyte sub-specialization in the small intestine.
Activation of the nuclear hormone receptor CAR in T cells protects the small intestine against bile acid-driven inflammation. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41586-021-03421-6 |