A human autoimmune organoid model reveals IL-7 function in coeliac disease.
António J M SantosVincent van UnenZhongqi LinSteven M ChirieleisonNhi HaArpit BatishJoshua E ChanJose CedanoElisa T ZhangQinghui MuAlexander Guh-SieselMadeline TomaskeDeana ColburgSushama VarmaShannon S ChoiAsbjørn ChristophersenAni BaghdasaryanKathryn E YostKasper KarlssonAndrew HaJing LiHongjie DaiZachary M SellersHoward Y ChangJames C Y DunnBing M ZhangElizabeth D MellinsLudvig M SollidNielsen Q Fernandez-BeckerMark M DavisCalvin J KuoPublished in: Nature (2024)
In vitro models of autoimmunity are constrained by an inability to culture affected epithelium alongside the complex tissue-resident immune microenvironment. Coeliac disease (CeD) is an autoimmune disease in which dietary gluten-derived peptides bind to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II human leukocyte antigen molecules (HLA)-DQ2 or HLA-DQ8 to initiate immune-mediated duodenal mucosal injury 1-4 . Here, we generated air-liquid interface (ALI) duodenal organoids from intact fragments of endoscopic biopsies that preserve epithelium alongside native mesenchyme and tissue-resident immune cells as a unit without requiring reconstitution. The immune diversity of ALI organoids spanned T cells, B and plasma cells, natural killer (NK) cells and myeloid cells, with extensive T-cell and B-cell receptor repertoires. HLA-DQ2.5-restricted gluten peptides selectively instigated epithelial destruction in HLA-DQ2.5-expressing organoids derived from CeD patients, and this was antagonized by blocking MHC-II or NKG2C/D. Gluten epitopes stimulated a CeD organoid immune network response in lymphoid and myeloid subsets alongside anti-transglutaminase 2 (TG2) autoantibody production. Functional studies in CeD organoids revealed that interleukin-7 (IL-7) is a gluten-inducible pathogenic modulator that regulates CD8 + T-cell NKG2C/D expression and is necessary and sufficient for epithelial destruction. Furthermore, endogenous IL-7 was markedly upregulated in patient biopsies from active CeD compared with remission disease from gluten-free diets, predominantly in lamina propria mesenchyme. By preserving the epithelium alongside diverse immune populations, this human in vitro CeD model recapitulates gluten-dependent pathology, enables mechanistic investigation and establishes a proof of principle for the organoid modelling of autoimmunity.
Keyphrases
- celiac disease
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- nk cells
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- stem cells
- multiple sclerosis
- end stage renal disease
- ultrasound guided
- dendritic cells
- newly diagnosed
- patient safety
- peripheral blood
- prognostic factors
- poor prognosis
- amino acid
- drug induced
- peritoneal dialysis
- binding protein
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- irritable bowel syndrome
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- immune response
- quality improvement
- natural killer cells