Abstract

The Pregnane X Receptor (PXR) is a principal signal transducer in mucosal responses to xenobiotic stress. It is well-recognized that inflammatory bowel disease is accompanied by xenobiotic stress, but the importance of the PXR in limiting inflammatory responses in inflammatory bowel disease remains obscure at best. We stimulate a total of 106 colonic biopsies from 19 Crohn's disease patients with active disease, 36 colonic biopsies from 8 control patients, colonic organoids and various cell culture models (either proficient or genetically deficient with respect to PXR) in vitro with the PXR ligand rifampicin or vehicle. Effects on NF-κB activity are assessed by measuring interleukin-8 (IL-8) and interleukin-1ß (IL-1ß) mRNA levels by qPCR and in cell culture models by NF-κB reporter-driven luciferase activity and Western blot for signal transduction elements. We observe a strict inverse correlation between colonic epithelial PXR levels and NF-κB target gene expression in colonic biopsies from Crohn's disease patients. PXR, activated by rifampicin, is rate-limiting for mucosal NF-κB activation in IBD. The correlation between colonic epithelial PXR levels and NF-κB target gene expression was also observed in intestinal organoids system. Furthermore, in preclinical in vitro models of intestinal inflammation, including intestinal organoids, genetic inactivation of PXR unleashes NF-κB-dependent signal transduction whereas conversely NF-κB signaling reduces levels of PXR expression. Our data indicate that the PXR is a major and clinically relevant antagonist of NF-κB activity in the intestinal epithelial compartment during inflammatory bowel disease.

Highlights

  • Intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) form the physical barrier between the gut content and the milieu interieur and perform a multitude of functions in cellular physiology including absorption of nutrients and water and constitute a first line of defense against pathogenic and xenobiotic challenge to the body [1, 2]

  • The correlation between colonic epithelial pregnane X receptor (PXR) levels and NF-κB target gene expression was observed in intestinal organoids system

  • Our data indicate that the PXR is a major and clinically relevant antagonist of NF-κB activity in the intestinal epithelial compartment during inflammatory bowel disease

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Summary

Introduction

Intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) form the physical barrier between the gut content and the milieu interieur and perform a multitude of functions in cellular physiology including absorption of nutrients and water and constitute a first line of defense against pathogenic and xenobiotic challenge to the body [1, 2]. The interaction between IEC functionality in innate immunity and xenobiotic detoxification remains largely obscure but is likely relevant in pathophysiology as pathogenic and xenobiotic stress often occurs concomitantly in the intestine [3], and breakdown of barrier function by specific epithelial subtypes underpins inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) [4]. For other xenobiotic-sensing nuclear receptors in general and PXR in particular, their potential functionality in limiting intestinal inflammation is less clear-cut. The Pregnane X Receptor (PXR) is a principal signal transducer in mucosal responses to xenobiotic stress. It is well-recognized that inflammatory bowel disease is accompanied by xenobiotic stress, but the importance of the PXR in limiting inflammatory responses in inflammatory bowel disease remains obscure at best

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