Publication | Closed Access
Deficiency in X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein promotes susceptibility to microbial triggers of intestinal inflammation
24
Citations
79
References
2021
Year
Chronic Inflammatory DiseasesDysbiosisIntestinal InflammationMicrobial PathogensHost-microbe InteractionsApoptosis ProteinApoptosisImmunologyImmune RegulationCell DeathPathologyInnate ImmunityInflammationGut-organ AxisUlcerative ColitisIntestinal MicrobiotaX-linked InhibitorAutoimmune DiseaseMendelian IbdMicrobiomeInflammatory DiseaseMucosal ImmunologyPaneth CellsPathogenesisGut BarrierMedicineNecroptosis
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is characterized by inappropriate immune responses to the microbiota in genetically susceptible hosts, but little is known about the pathways that link individual genetic alterations to microbiota-dependent inflammation. Here, we demonstrated that the loss of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP), a gene associated with Mendelian IBD, rendered Paneth cells sensitive to microbiota-, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)–, receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 (RIPK1)–, and RIPK3-dependent cell death. This was associated with deficiency in Paneth cell–derived antimicrobial peptides and alterations in the stratification and composition of the microbiota. Loss of XIAP was not sufficient to elicit intestinal inflammation but provided susceptibility to pathobionts able to promote granulomatous ileitis, which could be prevented by administration of a Paneth cell–derived antimicrobial peptide. These data reveal a pathway critical for host-microbial cross-talk, which is required for intestinal homeostasis and the prevention of inflammation and which is amenable to therapeutic targeting.
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