IL-1-driven stromal–neutrophil interactions define a subset of patients with inflammatory bowel disease that does not respond to therapies
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Published:2021-10-21
Issue:11
Volume:27
Page:1970-1981
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ISSN:1078-8956
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Container-title:Nature Medicine
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Med
Author:
Friedrich Matthias, Pohin MathildeORCID, Jackson Matthew A., Korsunsky IlyaORCID, Bullers Samuel J., Rue-Albrecht KevinORCID, Christoforidou Zoe, Sathananthan Dharshan, Thomas Tom, Ravindran Rahul, Tandon Ruchi, Peres Raphael Sanches, Sharpe HannahORCID, Wei Kevin, Watts Gerald F. M., Mann Elizabeth H.ORCID, Geremia Alessandra, Attar Moustafa, Barone Francesca, Brenner Michael, Buckley Christopher D., Coles Mark, Frei Andreas P.ORCID, Lassen Kara G., Powrie Fiona M., McCuaig SarahORCID, Thomas Lloyd, Collantes Elena, Uhlig Holm H.ORCID, Sansom Stephen N.ORCID, Easton AlistairORCID, Raychaudhuri SoumyaORCID, Travis Simon P.ORCID, Powrie Fiona M.ORCID, ,
Abstract
AbstractCurrent inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) therapies are ineffective in a high proportion of patients. Combining bulk and single-cell transcriptomics, quantitative histopathology and in situ localization across three cohorts of patients with IBD (total n = 376), we identify coexpressed gene modules within the heterogeneous tissular inflammatory response in IBD that map to distinct histopathological and cellular features (pathotypes). One of these pathotypes is defined by high neutrophil infiltration, activation of fibroblasts and vascular remodeling at sites of deep ulceration. Activated fibroblasts in the ulcer bed display neutrophil-chemoattractant properties that are IL-1R, but not TNF, dependent. Pathotype-associated neutrophil and fibroblast signatures are increased in nonresponders to several therapies across four independent cohorts (total n = 343). The identification of distinct, localized, tissular pathotypes will aid precision targeting of current therapeutics and provides a biological rationale for IL-1 signaling blockade in ulcerating disease.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
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