| Literature DB >> 30814735 |
Kaushal Parikh1,2, Agne Antanaviciute1,2,3, David Fawkner-Corbett1,2,4, Marta Jagielowicz1,2, Anna Aulicino1,2, Christoffer Lagerholm5, Simon Davis6, James Kinchen1,2, Hannah H Chen1,2, Nasullah Khalid Alham4, Neil Ashley7, Errin Johnson8, Philip Hublitz7, Leyuan Bao1,2, Joanna Lukomska1,2, Rajinder Singh Andev1,2, Elisabet Björklund1,2, Benedikt M Kessler6, Roman Fischer6, Robert Goldin9, Hashem Koohy3, Alison Simmons10,11.
Abstract
The colonic epithelium facilitates host-microorganism interactions to control mucosal immunity, coordinate nutrient recycling and form a mucus barrier. Breakdown of the epithelial barrier underpins inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). However, the specific contributions of each epithelial-cell subtype to this process are unknown. Here we profile single colonic epithelial cells from patients with IBD and unaffected controls. We identify previously unknown cellular subtypes, including gradients of progenitor cells, colonocytes and goblet cells within intestinal crypts. At the top of the crypts, we find a previously unknown absorptive cell, expressing the proton channel OTOP2 and the satiety peptide uroguanylin, that senses pH and is dysregulated in inflammation and cancer. In IBD, we observe a positional remodelling of goblet cells that coincides with downregulation of WFDC2-an antiprotease molecule that we find to be expressed by goblet cells and that inhibits bacterial growth. In vivo, WFDC2 preserves the integrity of tight junctions between epithelial cells and prevents invasion by commensal bacteria and mucosal inflammation. We delineate markers and transcriptional states, identify a colonic epithelial cell and uncover fundamental determinants of barrier breakdown in IBD.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30814735 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-0992-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962