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The epithelial layer of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract provides a barrier between the environment and the body. Dysfunction of the epithelium, including changes of the innate immune response facilitated by pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), plays a major role in the development of GI disorders. However, the organization of innate immune sensing, the expression and activity of PRRs and the factors contri¬buting to such possible organization along the GI tract are unclear. In recent years, stem cell-derived organoids gained increasing attention as promising tissue models. Here, a biobank of human and murine organoids comprising three lines from each GI segment; corpus, pylorus, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, colon was generated. RNA sequencing of 42 lines confirmed the preservation of tissue identity and revealed an extensive organization of innate immune signaling components along the cephalocaudal axis, giving each segment a specific innate immune profile. Comple-menting the region-specific expression analysis, several PRRs in human and murine organoids showed region- and species-specific function. To investigate the factors contributing to the patterning of innate immunity in the GI tract, the impact of microbial components was analyzed using murine embryo-derived, never colonized gastric and proximal intestinal organoids. Transcriptional profiling of embryo-derived organoids showed that while expression of some PRRs may depend on environmental cues as expected, an unexpectedly large part of segment-specific expression of PRR signaling components is independent of prior contact with microbial products. Further, analysis of published RNA-seq data as well as in vitro experiments using directed differentiation of organoids into specific cell types showed that expression of innate immune gene also depended on cellular differentiation along the crypt-villus axis. This underlined the importance of cellular differentiation rather than contact to microbial compounds for expression of PRRs. Lastly, analysis of published datasets of RNA-seq and ATAC-seq after knockout of the intestinal transcription factor Cdx2 demonstrated that Cdx2 is likely important for the expression of Nlrp6 and Naip1 in the murine intestine. Future experiments have to support these preliminary findings. Taken together, the expression of a large part of epithelial innate immunity is develop¬mentally defined and conserved in tissue-resident stem cells. The identification of mechanisms governing expression of genes related to immunity will provide further insights into the mechanisms that play a role in the progress of inflammatory diseases.
The human-bacterial pathogen interaction is a complex process that results from
a prolonged evolutionary arms race in the struggle for survival. The pathogen employs
virulence strategies to achieve host colonization, and the latter counteracts using defense
programs. The encounter of both organisms results in drastic physiological changes
leading to stress, which is an ancient response accompanying infection. Recent evidence
suggests that the stress response in the host converges with the innate immune pathways
and influences the outcome of infection. However, the contribution of stress and the exact
mechanism(s) of its involvement in host defense remain to be elucidated. Using the model
bacterial pathogen Shigella flexneri, and comparing it with the closely related pathogen
Salmonella Typhimurium, this study investigated the role of host stress in the outcome of
infection.
Shigella infection is characterized by a pronounced pro-inflammatory response
that causes intense stress in host tissues, particularly the intestinal epithelium, which
constitutes the first barrier against Shigella colonization. In this study, inflammatory
stress was simulated in epithelial cells by inducing oxidative stress, hypoxia, and cytokine
stimulation. Shigella infection of epithelial cells exposed to such stresses was strongly
inhibited at the adhesion/binding stage. This resulted from the depletion of sphingolipidrafts
in the plasma membrane by the stress-activated sphingomyelinases. Interestingly,
Salmonella adhesion was not affected, by virtue of its flagellar motility, which allowed the
gathering of bacteria at remaining membrane rafts. Moreover, the intracellular replication
of Shigella lead to a similar sphingolipid-raft depletion in the membrane across adjacent
cells inhibiting extracellular bacterial invasion.
Additionally, this study shows that Shigella infection interferes with the host stress
granule-formation in response to stress. Interestingly, infected cells exhibited a nuclear
depletion of the global RNA-binding stress-granule associated proteins TIAR and TIA-1
and their accumulation in the cytoplasm.
Overall, this work investigated different aspects of the host stress-response in the
defense against bacterial infection. The findings shed light on the importance of the host
stress-pathways during infection, and improve the understanding of different strategies
in host-pathogen interaction.