Critical role of interferons in gastrointestinal injury repair

The etiology of ulcerative colitis is poorly understood and is likely to involve perturbation of the complex interactions between the mucosal immune system and the commensal bacteria of the gut, with cytokines acting as important cross-regulators. Here we use IFN receptor-deficient mice in a dextran...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2021-05, Vol.12 (1), p.2624-15, Article 2624
Hauptverfasser: McElrath, Constance, Espinosa, Vanessa, Lin, Jian-Da, Peng, Jianya, Sridhar, Raghavendra, Dutta, Orchi, Tseng, Hsiang-Chi, Smirnov, Sergey V., Risman, Heidi, Sandoval, Marvin J., Davra, Viralkumar, Chang, Yun-Juan, Pollack, Brian P., Birge, Raymond B., Galan, Mark, Rivera, Amariliz, Durbin, Joan E., Kotenko, Sergei V.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The etiology of ulcerative colitis is poorly understood and is likely to involve perturbation of the complex interactions between the mucosal immune system and the commensal bacteria of the gut, with cytokines acting as important cross-regulators. Here we use IFN receptor-deficient mice in a dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) model of acute intestinal injury to study the contributions of type I and III interferons (IFN) to the initiation, progression and resolution of acute colitis. We find that mice lacking both types of IFN receptors exhibit enhanced barrier destruction, extensive loss of goblet cells and diminished proliferation of epithelial cells in the colon following DSS-induced damage. Impaired mucosal healing in double IFN receptor-deficient mice is driven by decreased amphiregulin expression, which IFN signaling can up-regulate in either the epithelial or hematopoietic compartment. Together, these data underscore the pleiotropic functions of IFNs and demonstrate that these critical antiviral cytokines also support epithelial regeneration following acute colonic injury. Despite being prevalent yet well studied, ulcerative colitis still has poorly characterized pathophysiology. Here the authors use mouse colitis models to find that type I and III interferon (IFN) both contribute to ameliorating the disease, with IFN signaling in either the epithelial or hematopoietic compartment sufficient for this protective effect.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-021-22928-0