4.6 Article

Smoking Suppresses the Therapeutic Potential of Adipose Stem Cells in Crohn's Disease Patients through Epigenetic Changes

Journal

CELLS
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells12071021

Keywords

DNA methylation; tobacco; cigarette; macrophages; cell therapy; adipose tissue; inflammatory bowel diseases; chronic inflammatory disease; immune cells; differentially methylated regions

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Smoking has negative effects on Crohn's disease patients, while quitting smoking after surgery can reduce the risk of recurrence. Both smoking and quitting smoking affect the immune suppression capabilities of adipose stem cells (ASCs) and increase inflammatory markers. Epigenetic analysis shows significant changes in gene methylation patterns in ASCs from smokers and ex-smokers with CD.
Patients with Crohn's disease (CD) who smoke are known to have a worse prognosis than never-smokers and a higher risk for post-surgical recurrence, whereas patients who quit smoking after surgery have significantly lower post-operative recurrence. The hypothesis was that smoking induces epigenetic changes that impair the capacity of adipose stem cells (ASCs) to suppress the immune system. It was also questioned whether this impairment remains in ex-smokers with CD. ASCs were isolated from non-smokers, smokers and ex-smokers with CD and their interactions with immune cells were studied. The ASCs from both smokers and ex-smokers promoted macrophage polarization to an M1 pro-inflammatory phenotype, were not able to inhibit T- and B-cell proliferation in vitro and enhanced the gene and protein expression of inflammatory markers including interleukin-1b. Genome-wide epigenetic analysis using two different bioinformatic approaches revealed significant changes in the methylation patterns of genes that are critical for wound healing, immune and metabolic response and p53-mediated DNA damage response in ASCs from smokers and ex-smokers with CD. In conclusion, cigarette smoking induces a pro-inflammatory epigenetic signature in ASCs that likely compromises their therapeutic potential.

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