A hepatocyte-specific transcriptional program driven by Rela and Stat3 exacerbates experimental colitis in mice by modulating bile synthesis

Author:

Singh Jyotsna1,Sarkar Binayak1,Yadav Mohit1,Deka Alvina2,Markandey Manasvini3,Sanyal Priyadarshini4,Nagarajan Perumal1ORCID,Gaikward Nilesh5,Ahuja Vineet3,Mohanty Debasisa1,Basak Soumen2,Gokhale Rajesh S16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Immunometabolism Laboratory, National Institute of Immunology

2. System Immunology Laboratory, National Institute of Immunology

3. Department of GastroEnterology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences

4. Center for Cellular and Molecular Biology

5. Gaikwad Steroidomics Lab LLC

6. Department of Biology, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research

Abstract

Hepatic factors secreted by the liver promote homeostasis and are pivotal for maintaining the liver-gut axis. Bile acid metabolism is one such example wherein, bile acid synthesis occurs in the liver and its biotransformation happens in the intestine. Dysfunctional interactions between the liver and the intestine stimulate varied pathological outcomes through its bidirectional portal communication. Indeed, aberrant bile acid metabolism has been reported in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). However, the molecular mechanisms underlying these crosstalks that perpetuate intestinal permeability and inflammation remain obscure. Here, we identify a novel hepatic gene program regulated by Rela and Stat3 that accentuates the inflammation in an acute experimental colitis model. Hepatocyte-specific ablation of Rela and Stat3 reduces the levels of primary bile acids in both the liver and the gut and shows a restricted colitogenic phenotype. On supplementation of chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA), knock-out mice exhibit enhanced colitis-induced alterations. This study provides persuasive evidence for the development of multi-organ strategies for treating IBD and identifies a hepatocyte-specific rela-stat3 network as a promising therapeutic target.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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