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Impaired antibacterial autophagy links granulomatous intestinal inflammation in Niemann-Pick disease type C1 and XIAP deficiency with NOD2 variants in Crohn's disease

Authors :
Tobias, Schwerd
Sumeet, Pandey
Huei-Ting, Yang
Katrin, Bagola
Elisabeth, Jameson
Jonathan, Jung
Robin H, Lachmann
Neil, Shah
Smita Y, Patel
Claire, Booth
Heiko, Runz
Gesche, Düker
Ruth, Bettels
Marianne, Rohrbach
Subra, Kugathasan
Helen, Chapel
Satish, Keshav
Abdul, Elkadri
Nick, Platt
Alexio M, Muise
Sibylle, Koletzko
Ramnik J, Xavier
Thorsten, Marquardt
Fiona, Powrie
James E, Wraith
Mads, Gyrd-Hansen
Frances M, Platt
Holm H, Uhlig
University of Zurich
Uhlig, Holm H
Source :
Gut
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Objective Patients with Niemann–Pick disease type C1 (NPC1), a lysosomal lipid storage disorder that causes neurodegeneration and liver damage, can present with IBD, but neither the significance nor the functional mechanism of this association is clear. We studied bacterial handling and antibacterial autophagy in patients with NPC1. Design We characterised intestinal inflammation in 14 patients with NPC1 who developed IBD. We investigated bacterial handling and cytokine production of NPC1 monocytes or macrophages in vitro and compared NPC1-associated functional defects to those caused by IBD-associated nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-containing protein 2 (NOD2) variants or mutations in X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis (XIAP). Results Patients with the lysosomal lipid storage disorder NPC1 have increased susceptibility to early onset fistulising colitis with granuloma formation, reminiscent of Crohn’s disease (CD). Mutations in NPC1 cause impaired autophagy due to defective autophagosome function that abolishes NOD2-mediated bacterial handling in vitro similar to variants in NOD2 or XIAP deficiency. In contrast to genetic NOD2 and XIAP variants, NPC1 mutations do not impair NOD2-receptorinteracting kinase 2 (RIPK2)-XIAP-dependent cytokine production. Pharmacological activation of autophagy can rescue bacterial clearance in macrophages in vitro by increasing the autophagic flux and bypassing defects in NPC1. Conclusions NPC1 confers increased risk of earlyonset severe CD. Our data support the concept that genetic defects at different checkpoints of selective autophagy cause a shared outcome of CD-like immunopathology linking monogenic and polygenic forms of IBD. Muramyl dipeptide-driven cytokine responses and antibacterial autophagy induction are parallel and independent signalling cascades downstream of the NOD2-RIPK2-XIAP complex.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gut
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....3faa84dafc9584ec2e683c7cc1b9c237