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Interleukin-22 regulates neutrophil recruitment in ulcerative colitis and is associated with resistance to ustekinumab therapy.

Polychronis PavlidisAnastasia TsakmakiEirini PantaziKatherine LiDomenico CozzettoJonathan Digby-BellFeifei YangJonathan W LoElena AlbertsAna Caroline Costa SaUmar NiaziJoshua R FriedmanAnna K LongYuchun DingChristopher D CareyChristopher Andrew LambMansoor SaqiMatthew MadgwickLeila GulAgatha TreveilTamas KorcsmarosThomas T MacdonaldGraham M LordGavin A BewickNicholas Powell
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
The function of interleukin-22 (IL-22) in intestinal barrier homeostasis remains controversial. Here, we map the transcriptional landscape regulated by IL-22 in human colonic epithelial organoids and evaluate the biological, functional and clinical significance of the IL-22 mediated pathways in ulcerative colitis (UC). We show that IL-22 regulated pro-inflammatory pathways are involved in microbial recognition, cancer and immune cell chemotaxis; most prominently those involving CXCR2 + neutrophils. IL-22-mediated transcriptional regulation of CXC-family neutrophil-active chemokine expression is highly conserved across species, is dependent on STAT3 signaling, and is functionally and pathologically important in the recruitment of CXCR2 + neutrophils into colonic tissue. In UC patients, the magnitude of enrichment of the IL-22 regulated transcripts in colonic biopsies correlates with colonic neutrophil infiltration and is enriched in non-responders to ustekinumab therapy. Our data provide further insights into the biology of IL-22 in human disease and highlight its function in the regulation of pathogenic immune pathways, including neutrophil chemotaxis. The transcriptional networks regulated by IL-22 are functionally and clinically important in UC, impacting patient trajectories and responsiveness to biological intervention.
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