Cell Reports Medicine (Jun 2021)

Interleukin-22 signaling attenuates necrotizing enterocolitis by promoting epithelial cell regeneration

  • Belgacem Mihi,
  • Qingqing Gong,
  • Lila S. Nolan,
  • Sarah E. Gale,
  • Martin Goree,
  • Elise Hu,
  • Wyatt E. Lanik,
  • Jamie M. Rimer,
  • Victoria Liu,
  • Olivia B. Parks,
  • Angela N. Lewis,
  • Pranjal Agrawal,
  • Marie L. Laury,
  • Pawan Kumar,
  • Elizabeth Huang,
  • Shay S. Bidani,
  • Cliff J. Luke,
  • Jay K. Kolls,
  • Misty Good

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 6
p. 100320

Abstract

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Summary: Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a deadly intestinal inflammatory disorder that primarily affects premature infants and lacks adequate therapeutics. Interleukin (IL)-22 plays a critical role in gut barrier maintenance, promoting epithelial regeneration, and controlling intestinal inflammation in adult animal models. However, the importance of IL-22 signaling in neonates during NEC remains unknown. We investigated the role of IL-22 in the neonatal intestine under homeostatic and inflammatory conditions by using a mouse model of NEC. Our data reveal that Il22 expression in neonatal murine intestine is negligible until weaning, and both human and murine neonates lack IL-22 production during NEC. Mice deficient in IL-22 or lacking the IL-22 receptor in the intestine display a similar susceptibility to NEC, consistent with the lack of endogenous IL-22 during development. Strikingly, treatment with recombinant IL-22 during NEC substantially reduces inflammation and enhances epithelial regeneration. These findings may provide a new therapeutic strategy to attenuate NEC.

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