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IL-13 as Target to Reduce Cholestasis and Dysbiosis in Abcb4 Knockout Mice.

Luisa HahnNora HelmrichDiran HerebianFelix DistelmaierUta DrebberEugen DomannStefan OlejniczakMarkus WeigelTorsten HainTimo RathStefan WirtzHans-Joachim MollenkopfNadine SchmidtChrista EwersAnne BaierYuri ChurinAnita WindhorstRalf WeiskirchenUlrich SteinhoffElke RoebMartin Roderfeld
Published in: Cells (2020)
The Th2 cytokine IL-13 is involved in biliary epithelial injury and liver fibrosis in patients as well as in animal models. The aim of this study was to investigate IL-13 as a therapeutic target during short term and chronic intrahepatic cholestasis in an Abcb4-knockout mouse model (Abcb4-/-). Lack of IL-13 protected Abcb4-/- mice transiently from cholestasis. This decrease in serum bile acids was accompanied by an enhanced excretion of bile acids and a normalization of fecal bile acid composition. In Abcb4-/-/IL-13-/- double knockout mice, bacterial translocation to the liver was significantly reduced and the intestinal microbiome resembled the commensal composition in wild type animals. In addition, 52-week-old Abcb4-/-IL-13-/- mice showed significantly reduced hepatic fibrosis. Abcb4-/- mice devoid of IL-13 transiently improved cholestasis and converted the composition of the gut microbiota towards healthy conditions. This highlights IL-13 as a potential therapeutic target in biliary diseases.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • liver fibrosis
  • mouse model
  • drug induced
  • randomized controlled trial
  • newly diagnosed
  • end stage renal disease
  • high fat diet induced
  • ejection fraction
  • metabolic syndrome
  • climate change