Potential new therapeutic approach for chronic inflammatory bowel diseases

cell
Microscopic image of a cultured intestinal epithelial cell with cell death programme activated (red). Pores form in the cell membrane (green) causing the cell to die. The nucleus is shown in blue.

FAU research team identify messenger substance protecting cells in the intestine

Why people suffer from chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) such as ulcerative colitis is only partially understood. However, it is known that the bacteria of the intestinal flora and dysfunction in the immune system play an important role. In patients with IBD, an increased number of cells in the intestinal wall, known as epithelial cells, die. Bacteria then pass from the interior of the intestine into the damaged intestinal wall, causing inflammation and further cell death. The epithelial barrier, the barrier between the intestinal contents and the intestinal wall also becomes more permeable. With increasing cell death, the disease also progresses as more bacteria settle in the damaged intestinal wall – a vicious circle. A research team led by Prof. Dr. Christoph Becker from FAU has now found a mechanism that could prevent cell death, break the vicious circle and potentially be used as a therapy for inflammatory bowel diseases. The results have now been published in the renowned journal Nature Cell Biology.

In mice and tissues of ulcerative colitis patients, researchers found that a messenger substance called prostaglandin E2 can protect epithelial cells from a special form of cell death, necroptosis. Prostaglandins are hormone-like messenger substances that have various effects in the organism. Researchers have found that prostaglandins such as prostaglandin E2 are released in the body during inflammation. However, it is not yet fully understood how prostaglandins regulate inflammatory processes.

In recent years, the researchers have already shown that the incorrect regulation of necroptosis leads to cell death and thus to holes in the intestinal barrier. Prostaglandin E2 prevents this by binding to EP4 receptors on the epithelial cells. The more of these receptors are activated, the fewer cells die, according to the FAU team from the Department of Medicine 1 – Gastroenterology, Pneumology and Endocrinology – at Universitätsklinikum Erlangen. Patients with high levels of EP4 on the cell surface show a milder course of disease than patients with low levels of EP4.

The activation of the receptors by prostaglandin E2 thus counteracts the progression of intestinal inflammation. Together with colleagues in Canada, the research team tested an artificially produced molecule that can activate the EP4 receptor, like prostaglandin E2. Treatment with this molecule could prevent excessive cell death in the intestinal barrier and block bacteria from penetrating it. These findings offer a promising new therapy approach for ulcerative colitis and other chronic inflammatory bowel diseases.

Further information

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41556-021-00708-8

Prof. Dr. Christoph Becker

Professorship for Molecular Gastroentrology

Phone: +49 9131 85 35886

christoph.becker@uk-erlangen.de