PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Pregnane X receptor activation constrains mucosal NF-κB activity in active inflammatory bowel disease.

  • J Jasper Deuring,
  • Meng Li,
  • Wanlu Cao,
  • Sunrui Chen,
  • Wenshi Wang,
  • Colin de Haar,
  • C Janneke van der Woude,
  • Maikel Peppelenbosch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221924
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
p. e0221924

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:The Pregnane X Receptor (PXR) is a principal signal transducer in mucosal responses to xenobiotic stress. It is well-recognized that inflammatory bowel disease is accompanied by xenobiotic stress, but the importance of the PXR in limiting inflammatory responses in inflammatory bowel disease remains obscure at best. METHODS:We stimulate a total of 106 colonic biopsies from 19 Crohn's disease patients with active disease, 36 colonic biopsies from 8 control patients, colonic organoids and various cell culture models (either proficient or genetically deficient with respect to PXR) in vitro with the PXR ligand rifampicin or vehicle. Effects on NF-κB activity are assessed by measuring interleukin-8 (IL-8) and interleukin-1ß (IL-1ß) mRNA levels by qPCR and in cell culture models by NF-κB reporter-driven luciferase activity and Western blot for signal transduction elements. RESULTS:We observe a strict inverse correlation between colonic epithelial PXR levels and NF-κB target gene expression in colonic biopsies from Crohn's disease patients. PXR, activated by rifampicin, is rate-limiting for mucosal NF-κB activation in IBD. The correlation between colonic epithelial PXR levels and NF-κB target gene expression was also observed in intestinal organoids system. Furthermore, in preclinical in vitro models of intestinal inflammation, including intestinal organoids, genetic inactivation of PXR unleashes NF-κB-dependent signal transduction whereas conversely NF-κB signaling reduces levels of PXR expression. CONCLUSIONS:Our data indicate that the PXR is a major and clinically relevant antagonist of NF-κB activity in the intestinal epithelial compartment during inflammatory bowel disease.