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Paneth cells as a site of origin for intestinal inflammation.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Adolph, Timon E 
Tomczak, Michal F 
Niederreiter, Lukas 
Ko, Hyun-Jeong 
Böck, Janne 

Abstract

The recognition of autophagy related 16-like 1 (ATG16L1) as a genetic risk factor has exposed the critical role of autophagy in Crohn's disease. Homozygosity for the highly prevalent ATG16L1 risk allele, or murine hypomorphic (HM) activity, causes Paneth cell dysfunction. As Atg16l1(HM) mice do not develop spontaneous intestinal inflammation, the mechanism(s) by which ATG16L1 contributes to disease remains obscure. Deletion of the unfolded protein response (UPR) transcription factor X-box binding protein-1 (Xbp1) in intestinal epithelial cells, the human orthologue of which harbours rare inflammatory bowel disease risk variants, results in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, Paneth cell impairment and spontaneous enteritis. Unresolved ER stress is a common feature of inflammatory bowel disease epithelium, and several genetic risk factors of Crohn's disease affect Paneth cells. Here we show that impairment in either UPR (Xbp1(ΔIEC)) or autophagy function (Atg16l1(ΔIEC) or Atg7(ΔIEC)) in intestinal epithelial cells results in each other's compensatory engagement, and severe spontaneous Crohn's-disease-like transmural ileitis if both mechanisms are compromised. Xbp1(ΔIEC) mice show autophagosome formation in hypomorphic Paneth cells, which is linked to ER stress via protein kinase RNA-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase (PERK), elongation initiation factor 2α (eIF2α) and activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4). Ileitis is dependent on commensal microbiota and derives from increased intestinal epithelial cell death, inositol requiring enzyme 1α (IRE1α)-regulated NF-κB activation and tumour-necrosis factor signalling, which are synergistically increased when autophagy is deficient. ATG16L1 restrains IRE1α activity, and augmentation of autophagy in intestinal epithelial cells ameliorates ER stress-induced intestinal inflammation and eases NF-κB overactivation and intestinal epithelial cell death. ER stress, autophagy induction and spontaneous ileitis emerge from Paneth-cell-specific deletion of Xbp1. Genetically and environmentally controlled UPR function within Paneth cells may therefore set the threshold for the development of intestinal inflammation upon hypomorphic ATG16L1 function and implicate ileal Crohn's disease as a specific disorder of Paneth cells.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Autophagy, Autophagy-Related Proteins, Carrier Proteins, Cell Line, DNA-Binding Proteins, Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress, Inflammation, Intestinal Diseases, Intestinal Mucosa, Mice, Paneth Cells, Regulatory Factor X Transcription Factors, Signal Transduction, Transcription Factors, Unfolded Protein Response, X-Box Binding Protein 1, eIF-2 Kinase

Journal Title

Nature

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0028-0836
1476-4687

Volume Title

503

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (G1002610)
Medical Research Council (G0601840)
Wellcome Trust (100140/Z/12/Z)
European Research Council (260961)