| Literature DB >> 28797042 |
Serena Vitale1, Caterina Strisciuglio2,3, Laura Pisapia4, Erasmo Miele3, Pasquale Barba4, Alessandra Vitale2, Sabrina Cenni3, Virginia Bassi3, Mariantonia Maglio3, Giovanna Del Pozzo4, Riccardo Troncone3, Annamaria Staiano3, Carmen Gianfrani1,3.
Abstract
In the recent years, the incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has dramatically increased in young subjects, however, the pathogenesis of paediatric IBD is poorly investigated. In this study we aimed to evaluate the cytokine pattern and the phenotype of cytokine producing cells in the intestinal mucosa of paediatric patients affected by Crohn's disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC) and of non-IBD healthy controls (HC). Cytokine (IL-15, TNF-α, INF-γ) production was analyzed at basal condition and after mitogen stimulation either intracellularly by flow cytometry or in intestinal cell culture supernatants by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). A higher frequency of enterocytes (EpCam+ cells) was observed in UC patients compared to CD or HC. An expansion of enterocytes producing IL-15 and TNF-α were found in IBD patients compared to HC. A marked expression of IL-15 in the intestinal epithelium of IBD patients was further confirmed by immunohistochemistry. Myeloid dendritic (CD11c+) cells producing TNF-α and INF-γ were increased in IBD biopsies. Unexpectedly, only after a strong mitogen stimulus, as phytohaemagglutinin, the frequency of CD3+ cells producing IFN-γ was increased in IBD compared to control intestinal mucosa. Interestingly, functional studies performed on organ cultures of intestinal biopsies with neutralizing anti-IL-15 monoclonal antibody showed a marked reduction of mononuclear cell activation, proliferation of crypt enterocytes, as well as a reduction of TNF-α release in organ culture supernatants. In conclusion, we found that in the gut mucosa of IBD children both enterocytes and dendritic cells produce proinflammatory cytokines. The over-expression of IL-15 by enterocytes in IBD intestine and the reduced IBD inflammation by IL-15 blockage suggests that this cytokine could be a therapeutic target in IBD.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28797042 PMCID: PMC5552230 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0182313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Increased frequencies of IL-15 producing cells in the intestinal mucosa of paediatric patients with IBD.
The frequency of cells spontaneously producing IL-15, TNF-α or IFN-γ was analysed in uninflamed areas of intestinal biopsies from paediatric patients with Crohn’s disease (CD), ulcerative colitis (UC), and non-IBD healthy controls (HC). Cytokine production was assessed by multi-color flow cytometry performed on intestinal cells, after an overnight incubation with IL-2 and after additional 5 hours with the Golgi transport inhibitor BFA. The mucosal infiltration of IL-15 expressing cells was evaluated by surface staining, whilst TNF-α and IFN-γ producing cells were detected by intracytoplasmic staining. (A) Overall percentage of IL-15-positive cells and (B) one representative flow cytometry dot plot of IL-15 stained cells from each group of patients are shown. Numbers correspond to the cytokine positive cells gated on forward- and side-scatter properties to exclude dead cells, debris and granular cells. The frequencies of intestinal cells producing TNF-α (C) and IFN-γ (D), evaluated by intracellular staining, are shown. Each point represents the percentage of positive cells in pooled intestinal mucosa biopsies taken from one single subject. Horizontal bars are the median values. The Mann-Whitney U test was applied to evaluate statistical significant differences among the three groups.
Clinical features of paediatric subjects enrolled.
| CD | UC | HC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | 26 | 26 | 19 |
| Gender, male/female | 14/12 | 14/12 | 13/6 |
| Mean age (year and range) | 14.6 (7.8–18) | 13.9 (8.6–18.4) | 10.4 (3.4–18.5) |
| Mean age at diagnosis (year and range) | 11.2 (2.9–18) | 11.6 (5–15.8) | na |
| Mean disease duration (month and range) | 2.30 (0–6.2) | 2.6 (0–11.5) | na |
| Therapy: | na | ||
| Aminosalicylates | 7 | 10 | |
| Immunosuppressants | 5 | 10 | |
| Aminosalicylates and immunosuppressants | 5 | 1 | |
| Monoclonalantibodies | 1 | 0 | |
| Nutritional | 2 | 0 | |
| No therapy | 6 | 5 |
na indicates not applicable
IL-15 epithelial expression in the intestinal biopsies from paediatric IBD patients.
| Patients | Age (yr,m)/gender | Age at diagnosis (yr,m) | Therapy | IL-15 expression |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17.6/M | 9 | Nutritional | moderate/strong | |
| 16.6/F | 13.6 | Aminosalicylates | moderate | |
| 15.4/F | 13.4 | Nutritional | moderate | |
| 17.3/M | 11.5 | Aminosalicylates | weak/moderate | |
| 13.9/M | 10.2 | Immunosuppresants/ Aminosalicylates | weak/moderate | |
| 10.4/F | 9 | Immunosuppresants | moderate/strong | |
| 16.5/M | 14.8 | Aminosalicylates | weak/moderate | |
| 17.7/M | 12 | Aminosalicylates | moderate | |
| 14.4/M | 12.6 | Aminosalicylates | weak/moderate | |
| 13.9/M | 12.1 | Immunosuppresants | moderate | |
| 12/F | 6 | Immunosuppresants/ Aminosalicylates | moderate | |
| 12/F | 14.9 | Immunosuppresants | weak/moderate |