4.7 Article

BMP signaling in the intestinal epithelium drives a critical feedback loop to restrain IL-13-driven tuft cell hyperplasia

Journal

SCIENCE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 71, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abl6543

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Funding

  1. Norwegian Research Council [223255/F50, 274760]
  2. Norwegian Cancer Society [182767]
  3. Wellcome Trust [106122, 219530, 104111]

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This study investigated immune responses in the intestinal epithelium using organoid image analysis, transcriptomic analysis, and in vivo infection models. The researchers found that IL-13 and IL-22 induce genes associated with goblet cells, but the resulting phenotypes of goblet cells are different. Additionally, only IL-13-driven goblet cells are associated with classical NOTCH signaling. The study also revealed that IL-13 activates the BMP pathway, which negatively regulates type 2 immunity and tuft cell hyperplasia.
The intestinal tract is a common site for various types of infections including viruses, bacteria, and helminths, each requiring specific modes of immune defense. The intestinal epithelium has a pivotal role in both immune initiation and effector stages, which are coordinated by lymphocyte cytokines such as IFN gamma, IL-13, and IL-22. Here, we studied intestinal epithelial immune responses using organoid image analysis based on a convolutional neural network, transcriptomic analysis, and in vivo infection models. We found that IL-13 and IL-22 both induce genes associated with goblet cells, but the resulting goblet cell phenotypes are dichotomous. Moreover, only IL-13-driven goblet cells are associated with classical NOTCH signaling. We further showed that IL-13 induces the bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) pathway, which acts in a negative feedback loop on immune type 2-driven tuft cell hyperplasia. This is associated with inhibiting Sox4 expression to putatively limit the tuft cell progenitor population. Blocking ALK2, a BMP receptor, with the inhibitor dorsomorphin homolog 1 (DMH1) interrupted the feedback loop, resulting in greater tuft cell numbers both in vitro and in vivo after infection with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. Together, this investigation of cytokine effector responses revealed an unexpected and critical role for the BMP pathway in regulating type 2 immunity, which can be exploited to tailor epithelial immune responses.

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