| Literature DB >> 33651715 |
Helmut Grasberger1, Andrew T Magis2,3, Elisa Sheng3, Matthew P Conomos3,4, Min Zhang1, Lea S Garzotto1, Guoqing Hou1, Shrinivas Bishu1, Hiroko Nagao-Kitamoto1, Mohamad El-Zaatari1, Sho Kitamoto1, Nobuhiko Kamada1, Ryan W Stidham1, Yasutada Akiba5, Jonathan Kaunitz5, Yael Haberman6, Subra Kugathasan7, Lee A Denson6, Gilbert S Omenn8, John Y Kao1.
Abstract
A primordial gut-epithelial innate defense response is the release of hydrogen peroxide by dual NADPH oxidase (DUOX). In inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a condition characterized by an imbalanced gut microbiota-immune homeostasis, DUOX2 isoenzyme is the highest induced gene. Performing multiomic analyses using 2872 human participants of a wellness program, we detected a substantial burden of rare protein-altering DUOX2 gene variants of unknown physiologic significance. We identified a significant association between these rare loss-of-function variants and increased plasma levels of interleukin-17C, which is induced also in mucosal biopsies of patients with IBD. DUOX2-deficient mice replicated increased IL-17C induction in the intestine, with outlier high Il17c expression linked to the mucosal expansion of specific Proteobacteria pathobionts. Integrated microbiota/host gene expression analyses in patients with IBD corroborated IL-17C as a marker for epithelial activation by gram-negative bacteria. Finally, the impact of DUOX2 variants on IL-17C induction provided a rationale for variant stratification in case control studies that substantiated DUOX2 as an IBD risk gene. Thus, our study identifies an association of deleterious DUOX2 variants with a preclinical hallmark of disturbed microbiota-immune homeostasis that appears to precede the manifestation of IBD.Entities:
Keywords: Gastroenterology; Genetic variation; Inflammatory bowel disease; Innate immunity
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33651715 PMCID: PMC8087203 DOI: 10.1172/JCI141676
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808