Publication | Open Access
A tissue injury sensing and repair pathway distinct from host pathogen defense
94
Citations
76
References
2023
Year
Il24 AblationInnate Immune SystemImmunologyImmune RegulationInnate ImmunityImmune SystemHost Immune ResponseInflammationHost ResponseTissue Injury SensingPathogen InfectionImmune MediatorCell SignalingHost-pathogen InteractionsMolecular SignalingTissue InjuryIl24 ExpressionDisease BiologyCell BiologyHost Pathogen DefensePhagocyteCytokinePathogenesisWound HealingMedicine
Pathogen infection and tissue injury are universal insults that disrupt homeostasis. Innate immunity senses microbial infections and induces cytokines/chemokines to activate resistance mechanisms. Here, we show that, in contrast to most pathogen-induced cytokines, interleukin-24 (IL-24) is predominately induced by barrier epithelial progenitors after tissue injury and is independent of microbiome or adaptive immunity. Moreover, Il24 ablation in mice impedes not only epidermal proliferation and re-epithelialization but also capillary and fibroblast regeneration within the dermal wound bed. Conversely, ectopic IL-24 induction in the homeostatic epidermis triggers global epithelial-mesenchymal tissue repair responses. Mechanistically, Il24 expression depends upon both epithelial IL24-receptor/STAT3 signaling and hypoxia-stabilized HIF1α, which converge following injury to trigger autocrine and paracrine signaling involving IL-24-mediated receptor signaling and metabolic regulation. Thus, parallel to innate immune sensing of pathogens to resolve infections, epithelial stem cells sense injury signals to orchestrate IL-24-mediated tissue repair.
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