4.8 Article

Ontogeny and function of the circadian clock in intestinal organoids

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 41, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embj.2020106973

Keywords

circadian rhythms; Clostridium difficile toxin B; human enteroids; intestinal organoids; Rac1

Funding

  1. Digestive Health Center at CCHMC [NIH P30 DK078392]
  2. Live Microscopy Core at University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
  3. University of Cincinnati Bridge
  4. Pendleton Laboratory endowment
  5. CCHMC Research Innovation and Pilot Funding
  6. FAPESP [2017/16242-4, 2019/04451-3]
  7. [U19 AI116491]
  8. [U19 AI116497]
  9. [R01 DK117005]
  10. [P01 HD093363]
  11. [UG3 DK119982]

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The study shows that human intestinal organoids and enteroids exhibit circadian rhythms and demonstrate circadian phase-dependent responses to Clostridium difficile toxin B. Mouse and human enteroids display anti-phasic necrotic cell death responses to TcdB.
Circadian rhythms regulate diverse aspects of gastrointestinal physiology ranging from the composition of microbiota to motility. However, development of the intestinal circadian clock and detailed mechanisms regulating circadian physiology of the intestine remain largely unknown. In this report, we show that both pluripotent stem cell-derived human intestinal organoids engrafted into mice and patient-derived human intestinal enteroids possess circadian rhythms and demonstrate circadian phase-dependent necrotic cell death responses to Clostridium difficile toxin B (TcdB). Intriguingly, mouse and human enteroids demonstrate anti-phasic necrotic cell death responses to TcdB. RNA-Seq analysis shows that similar to 3-10% of the detectable transcripts are rhythmically expressed in mouse and human enteroids. Remarkably, we observe anti-phasic gene expression of Rac1, a small GTPase directly inactivated by TcdB, between mouse and human enteroids, and disruption of Rac1 abolishes clock-dependent necrotic cell death responses. Our findings uncover robust functions of circadian rhythms regulating clock-controlled genes in both mouse and human enteroids governing organism-specific, circadian phase-dependent necrotic cell death responses, and lay a foundation for human organ- and disease-specific investigation of clock functions using human organoids for translational applications.

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