Abstract

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic relapsing inflammatory disease of the intestine. IBD is a multifactorial disorder, and IBD-associated genes are critical in innate immune response, inflammatory response, autophagy, and epithelial barrier integrity. Moreover, epithelial oxygen tension plays a critical role in intestinal inflammation and resolution in IBD. The intestines have a dynamic and rapid fluctuation in cellular oxygen tension, which is dysregulated in IBD. Intestinal epithelial cells have a steep oxygen gradient where the tips of the villi are hypoxic and the oxygenation increases at the base of the villi. IBD results in heightened hypoxia throughout the mucosa. Hypoxia signals through a well-conserved family of transcription factors, where hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α and HIF-2α are essential in maintaining intestinal homeostasis. In inflamed mucosa, HIF-1α increases barrier protective genes, elicits protective innate immune responses, and activates an antimicrobial response through the increase in β-defensins. HIF-2α is essential in maintaining an epithelial-elicited inflammatory response and the regenerative and proliferative capacity of the intestine following an acute injury. HIF-1α activation in colitis leads to a protective response, whereas chronic activation of HIF-2α increases the pro-inflammatory response, intestinal injury, and cancer. In this mini-review, we detail the role of HIF-1α and HIF-2α in intestinal inflammation and injury and therapeutic implications of targeting HIF signaling in IBD.

Highlights

  • The intestine is a highly regenerative tissue, which completely renews every 5 to 6 days

  • inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is divided into two major subgroups: ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD)

  • prolyl hydroxylase domain enzymes (PHDs) inhibitors may lead to more pulsatile activation of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α and HIF2α rather than chronic high increase in HIF-2α, which leads to inflammatory injury

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Summary

Introduction

The intestine is a highly regenerative tissue, which completely renews every 5 to 6 days. PHD specificity for HIF-α subunits is not clear, but disruption of all three genes is needed for robust HIF-1α and HIF-2α activation in the intestine [4]. Inflammation leads to enhanced oxygen consumption of intestinal epithelial cells. In addition to hypoxic staining in mouse models, HIF-1α and HIF-2α are highly increased in epithelial cells in UC and CD patients [8].

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