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Prostaglandin E2 promotes intestinal inflammation via inhibiting microbiota-dependent regulatory T cells

Authors :
John P. Iredale
Stephen M. Anderton
Jürgen Schwarze
Sarah E. M. Howie
Luke C. Davies
Jolinda Pollock
Gwo-Tzer Ho
Alexander Adima
Xue-Feng Li
Amil Mair
Hatti X. Yao
Valerie B. O'Donnell
Richard M. Breyer
Adriano G. Rossi
Danielle J. Smyth
Xiaozhong Zheng
Victoria J. Tyrrell
Damian J. Mole
Shuh Narumiya
Bin-Zhi Qian
Chengcan Yao
Rick M. Maizels
Mark J. Arends
Richard A. O’Connor
You Zhou
Calum T. Robb
Robert Andrews
Siobhan Crittenden
Sonja Vermeren
Marie Goepp
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

The gut microbiota fundamentally regulates intestinal homeostasis and disease partially through mechanisms that involve modulation of regulatory T cells (Tregs), yet how the microbiota-Treg crosstalk is physiologically controlled is incompletely defined. Here, we report that prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), a well-known mediator of inflammation, inhibits mucosal Tregs in a manner depending on the gut microbiota. PGE2 through its receptor EP4 diminishes Treg-favorable commensal microbiota. Transfer of the gut microbiota that was modified by PGE2-EP4 signaling modulates mucosal Treg responses and exacerbates intestinal inflammation. Mechanistically, PGE2-modified microbiota regulates intestinal mononuclear phagocytes and type I interferon signaling. Depletion of mononuclear phagocytes or deficiency of type I interferon receptor contracts PGE2-dependent Treg inhibition. Taken together, our findings provide emergent evidence that PGE2-mediated disruption of microbiota-Treg communication fosters intestinal inflammation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........95b4764f5cc59cde3a5eaba08701a1f2