Clostridioides difficileinfection damages colonic stem cells via TcdB, impairing epithelial repair and recovery from disease

Author:

Mileto Steven J.ORCID,Jardé ThierryORCID,Childress Kevin O.ORCID,Jensen Jaime L.ORCID,Rogers Ashleigh P.,Kerr Genevieve,Hutton Melanie L.ORCID,Sheedlo Michael J.,Bloch Sarah C.,Shupe John A.,Horvay Katja,Flores Tracey,Engel RebekahORCID,Wilkins Simon,McMurrick Paul J.,Lacy D. BordenORCID,Abud Helen E.,Lyras DenaORCID

Abstract

Gastrointestinal infections often induce epithelial damage that must be repaired for optimal gut function. While intestinal stem cells are critical for this regeneration process [R. C. van der Wath, B. S. Gardiner, A. W. Burgess, D. W. Smith,PLoS One8, e73204 (2013); S. Kozaret al.,Cell Stem Cell13, 626–633 (2013)], how they are impacted by enteric infections remains poorly defined. Here, we investigate infection-mediated damage to the colonic stem cell compartment and how this affects epithelial repair and recovery from infection. Using the pathogenClostridioides difficile,we show that infection disrupts murine intestinal cellular organization and integrity deep into the epithelium, to expose the otherwise protected stem cell compartment, in a TcdB-mediated process. Exposure and susceptibility of colonic stem cells to intoxication compromises their function during infection, which diminishes their ability to repair the injured epithelium, shown by altered stem cell signaling and a reduction in the growth of colonic organoids from stem cells isolated from infected mice. We also show, using both mouse and human colonic organoids, that TcdB from epidemic ribotype 027 strains does not require Frizzled 1/2/7 binding to elicit this dysfunctional stem cell state. This stem cell dysfunction induces a significant delay in recovery and repair of the intestinal epithelium of up to 2 wk post the infection peak. Our results uncover a mechanism by which an enteric pathogen subverts repair processes by targeting stem cells during infection and preventing epithelial regeneration, which prolongs epithelial barrier impairment and creates an environment in which disease recurrence is likely.

Funder

Department of Health | National Health and Medical Research Council

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Molecular Biophysics training grant

Gastroenterology training grant

Monash Strategic grant

Let's Beat Bowel Cancer

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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