Abstract

Abstract Background The programs that perpetuate the inflammation and prevent epithelial repair in Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) remain unclear. Interleukin (IL)-1 plays a role in the maintenance of mucosal homeostasis but also in IBD. Expansion of IL-1 expressing myeloid cells is a hallmark of IBD tissue, including severe and anti-TNF unresponsive disease, and IL-1 expression is highly localized to ulcer beds. However, little is known about the presence of bioactive IL-1 proteins in the cell-free mucosal environment of IBD, nor whether IL-1-driven programs affect epithelial regeneration in IBD ulcers. Methods We established a highly sensitive assay (~500-fold greater than ELISA) to assess bioactive extracellular IL-1 from previously cryopreserved IBD biopsies. We assessed a cohort of Crohn’s Disease (CD, n=23), Ulcerative Colitis (UC, n=18) and non-IBD (n=17) patients, with biopsies from paired inflamed/uninflamed regions (primarily colon but also ileal). We assessed IL-1 bioactivity, including IL-1α vs IL-1β contributions, and performed RNA-seq of samples’ matched cellular compartments. An ulcer-associated gene signature was interrogated in a single-cell (sc)RNA-seq cohort (n=42) of very early onset (VEO)IBD including monogenic disorders, as well as publicly available IBD bulk RNA-seq datasets and scRNA-seq of mouse models of colitis. Results IL-1α and IL-1β bioactivity corresponded with disease and ulcer severity in CD and UC. The most extreme signals were seen in select CD patients with deep ulceration. IL-1α was the predominant contributor to total IL-1 bioactivity in most patients although several with ulcers displayed IL-1β predominance. IL-1 bioactivity correlated with IL-1 transcripts in matched RNA-seq, and weighted gene co-expression network analysis revealed a compelling ulcer-specific module. This module contained transcription factors and genes related to cell state, validated in publicly available datasets (e.g. RISK cohort of ileal CD and scRNA-seq of murine DSS colitis), that when interrogated in a scRNA-seq dataset of VEOIBD (including patients with IL-10RA mutations characterized by deep ulcers), suggests an orchestrated IL-1-driven myeloid/stromal response to epithelial ulceration involving cell state reprogramming and loss of key myofibroblast populations. Conclusion Mucosal ulceration in IBD is associated with bioactive IL-1α and IL-1β proteins, and transcriptomic evaluation of the same correlates with bioactive signal. An ulcer-associated gene module, validated in other datasets, sheds light on IL-1 biology in intestinal epithelial repair. Results strongly suggest the IL-1 signaling pathway being an attractive and precision-based therapeutic target in subsets of IBD patients.

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