4.8 Article

Bacteria engineered to produce IL-22 in intestine induce expression of REG3G to reduce ethanol-induced liver disease in mice

Journal

GUT
Volume 68, Issue 8, Pages 1504-1515

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2018-317232

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund [J4063-B30]
  2. NIH [R01 AA020703, R01 AA24726, U01 AA021856, U01 AA026939, R01 GM124494]
  3. Biomedical Laboratory Research & Development Service of the VA Office of Research and Development [I01BX002213]
  4. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme [ERC-2016-StG-71577]
  5. UW-Madison Food Research Institute [233PRJ75PW]
  6. UW-Madison Institute of Clinical and Translational Research - National Center for Advancing Translational Science [UL1TR000427]
  7. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [J4063] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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Objective Antimicrobial C-type lectin regenerating islet-derived 3 gamma (REG3G) is suppressed in the small intestine during chronic ethanol feeding. Our aim was to determine the mechanism that underlies REG3G suppression during experimental alcoholic liver disease. Design Interleukin 22 (IL-22) regulates expression of REG3G. Therefore, we investigated the role of IL-22 in mice subjected to chronic-binge ethanol feeding (NIAAA model). Results In a mouse model of alcoholic liver disease, we found that type 3 innate lymphoid cells produce lower levels of IL-22. Reduced IL-22 production was the result of ethanol-induced dysbiosis and lower intestinal levels of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), a microbiota-derived ligand of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR), which regulates expression of IL-22. Importantly, faecal levels of IAA were also found to be lower in patients with alcoholic hepatitis compared with healthy controls. Supplementation to restore intestinal levels of IAA protected mice from ethanol-induced steatohepatitis by inducing intestinal expression of IL-22 and REG3G, which prevented translocation of bacteria to liver. We engineered Lactobacillus reuteri to produce IL-22 (L. reuteri/IL-22) and fed them to mice along with the ethanol diet; these mice had reduced liver damage, inflammation and bacterial translocation to the liver compared with mice fed an isogenic control strain and upregulated expression of REG3G in intestine. However, L. reuteri/IL-22 did not reduce ethanol-induced liver disease in Reg3g(-/-) mice. Conclusion Ethanol-associated dysbiosis reduces levels of IAA and activation of the AHR to decrease expression of IL-22 in the intestine, leading to reduced expression of REG3G; this results in bacterial translocation to the liver and steatohepatitis. Bacteria engineered to produce IL22 induce expression of REG3G to reduce ethanolinduced steatohepatitis.

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