6 research outputs found
Thymic stromal lymphopoietin does not activate human basophils.
International audienc
Viral gene transfer of APPsα rescues synaptic failure in an Alzheimerâs disease mouse model
International audienc
Multiomics Blood Biomarkers Predict Alzheimer from predementia with High Specificity
International audienc
System-level immune monitoring reveals new pathophysiological features in hepatitis-associated aplastic anemia
International audienceNo abstract availabl
IL-7 receptor influences anti-TNF responsiveness and T cell gut homing in inflammatory bowel disease
International audienceIt remains unknown what causes inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including signaling networks perpetuating chronic gastrointestinal inflammation in Crohnâs disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), in humans. According to an analysis of up to 500 patients with IBD and 100 controls, we report that key transcripts of the IL-7 receptor (IL-7R) pathway are accumulated in inflamed colon tissues of severe CD and UC patients not responding to either immunosuppressive/corticosteroid, anti-TNF, or anti-α4ÎČ7 therapies. High expression of both IL7R and IL-7R signaling signature in the colon before treatment is strongly associated with nonresponsiveness to anti-TNF therapy. While in mice IL-7 is known to play a role in systemic inflammation, we found that in humans IL-7 also controlled α4ÎČ7 integrin expression and imprinted gut-homing specificity on T cells. IL-7R blockade reduced human T cell homing to the gut and colonic inflammation in vivo in humanized mouse models, and altered effector T cells in colon explants from UC patients grown ex vivo. Our findings show that failure of current treatments for CD and UC is strongly associated with an overexpressed IL-7R signaling pathway and point to IL-7R as a relevant therapeutic target and potential biomarker to fill an unmet need in clinical IBD detection and treatment