Abstract

Microbial dysbiosis commonly occurs in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). Exogenous causes of dysbiosis such as antibiotics and diet are well described, but host derived causes are understudied. A20 is a potent regulator of signals triggered by microbial pattern molecules, and A20 regulates susceptibility to intestinal inflammation in mice and in humans. We now report that mice lacking A20 expression in dendritic cells, A20FL/FL CD11c-Cre mice (or A20dDC mice), spontaneously develop colitogenic intestinal dysbiosis that is evident upon weaning and precedes the onset of colitis. Intestines from A20dDC mice express increased amounts of Reg3β and Reg3γ, but not Ang4. A20 deficient DCs promote gut microbiota perturbation in the absence of adaptive lymphocytes. Moreover, A20 deficient DCs directly induce expression of Reg3β and Reg3γ but not Ang 4 in normal intestinal epithelial cell enteroid cultures in the absence of other cell types. These findings reveal a pathophysiological pathway in which defective expression of an IBD susceptibility gene in DCs drives aberrant expression of anti-bacterial peptides and luminal dysbiosis that in turn confers host susceptibility to intestinal inflammation.

Highlights

  • Symbiosis between commensal microbes and host immune cells in the intestine involves bidirectional secretion of molecules that provide homeostatic signals [1,2]

  • As A20 deficient Dendritic cells (DCs) exert potent physiological influences upon intestinal immune homeostasis, we investigated whether these cells might regulate the composition of intestinal microbial communities

  • We previously observed that mice lacking A20 expression in DCs (A20FL/FL CD11c-Cre mice, or as termed A20dDC mice) spontaneously develop intestinal inflammation after 4 month of age [13]

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Summary

Introduction

Symbiosis between commensal microbes and host immune cells in the intestine involves bidirectional secretion of molecules that provide homeostatic signals [1,2]. We previously observed that mice lacking A20 expression in DCs (A20FL/FL CD11c-Cre mice, or as termed A20dDC mice) spontaneously develop intestinal inflammation after 4 month of age [13]. While a small number of taxa were modestly enriched in 2 or 4 week old A20dDC pups compared with control (Cre-) littermates, these experiments revealed no significant differences in bacterial microbiota alpha or beta-diversity in 1, 2 or 4 week old A20dDC mice compared to controls (Fig 1D and 1E and S1 Fig) (S2 Table).

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