Communications Biology (Nov 2023)

Proenkephalin deletion in hematopoietic cells induces intestinal barrier failure resulting in clinical feature similarities with irritable bowel syndrome in mice

  • Xavier Mas-Orea,
  • Lea Rey,
  • Louise Battut,
  • Cyrielle Bories,
  • Camille Petitfils,
  • Anne Abot,
  • Nadine Gheziel,
  • Eve Wemelle,
  • Catherine Blanpied,
  • Jean-Paul Motta,
  • Claude Knauf,
  • Frederick Barreau,
  • Eric Espinosa,
  • Meryem Aloulou,
  • Nicolas Cenac,
  • Matteo Serino,
  • Lionel Mouledous,
  • Nicolas Fazilleau,
  • Gilles Dietrich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-05542-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Opioid-dependent immune-mediated analgesic effects have been broadly reported upon inflammation. In preclinical mouse models of intestinal inflammatory diseases, the local release of enkephalins (endogenous opioids) by colitogenic T lymphocytes alleviate inflammation-induced pain by down-modulating gut-innervating nociceptor activation in periphery. In this study, we wondered whether this immune cell-derived enkephalin-mediated regulation of the nociceptor activity also operates under steady state conditions. Here, we show that chimeric mice engrafted with enkephalin-deficient bone marrow cells exhibit not only visceral hypersensitivity but also an increase in both epithelial paracellular and transcellular permeability, an alteration of the microbial topography resulting in increased bacteria-epithelium interactions and a higher frequency of IgA-producing plasma cells in Peyer’s patches. All these alterations of the intestinal homeostasis are associated with an anxiety-like behavior despite the absence of an overt inflammation as observed in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. Thus, our results show that immune cell-derived enkephalins play a pivotal role in maintaining gut homeostasis and normal behavior in mice. Because a defect in the mucosal opioid system remarkably mimics some major clinical symptoms of the irritable bowel syndrome, its identification might help to stratify subgroups of patients.