Frontiers in Immunology (Aug 2024)

Regulation of Bacteroides acidifaciens by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor in IL-22-producing immune cells has sex-dependent consequential impact on colitis

  • Chandani Mitchell,
  • Shanieka Staley,
  • Michal Claire Williams,
  • Archana Saxena,
  • Raymond Bogdon,
  • Kasie Roark,
  • Michele Hailey,
  • Kathryn Miranda,
  • William Becker,
  • Nicholas Dopkins,
  • Maria Marjorette Pena,
  • Kristen M. Hogan,
  • Maredith Baird,
  • Kiesha Wilson,
  • Prakash Nagarkatti,
  • Mitzi Nagarkatti,
  • Philip Brandon Busbee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2024.1444045
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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IntroductionColitis is an inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) characterized by immune cell dysregulation and alterations in the gut microbiome. In our previous report, we showed a natural product in cruciferous vegetables and ligand of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), indole-3-carbinol (I3C), was able to reduce colitis-induced disease severity and microbial dysbiosis in an interleukin-22 (IL-22) dependent manner.MethodsIn the current study, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) from colonocytes during colitis induction and supplementation with I3C and show how this treatment alters expression of genes involved in IL-22 signaling. To further define the role of IL-22 signaling in I3C-mediated protection during colitis and disease-associated microbial dysbiosis, we generated mice with AhR deficiency in RAR-related orphan receptor c (Rorc)-expressing cells (AhRΔRorc) which depletes this receptor in immune cells involved in production of IL-22. Colitis was induced in wildtype (WT), AhRΔRorc, and littermate (LM) mice with or without I3C treatment. ResultsResults showed AhRΔRorc mice lost the efficacy effects of I3C treatment which correlated with a loss of ability to increase IL-22 by innate lymphoid type 3 (ILC3s), not T helper 22 (Th22) cells. 16S rRNA microbiome profiling studies showed AhRΔRorc mice were unable to regulate disease-associated increases in Bacteroides, which differed between males and females. Lastly, inoculation with a specific disease-associated Bacteroides species, Bacteroides acidifaciens (B. acidifaciens), was shown to exacerbate colitis in females, but not males. DiscussionCollectively, this report highlights the cell and sex-specific role of AhR in regulating microbes that can impact colitis disease.

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