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Oxysterols stimulate specific immune cells in the large intestine to form lymphoid tissue
Cholesterol metabolites cause specific immune cells in the large intestine to move, which lies behind the formation of the immune system’s important lymphoid tissue in the intestine, reports researchers at Karolinska Institutet.
“We have discovered that ILCs use a surface protein called GPR183 to sense the oxysterols, which attracts ILCs to specific sites in the large intestine where lymphoid tissue is formed,” says Tim Willinger, researcher at Karolinska Institutet’s Department of Medicine in Huddinge, who has led the study.
Oxysterols
For those who have autoimmune inflammatory bowel disease, such as ulcerative colitis, the lymphoid tissue can react to the body’s own cells and cause chronic inflammation. Hitherto, it has not been known which signals control the formation of the lymphoid tissue in the large intestine. But, now scientists at Karolinska Institutet have discovered that cholesterol metabolites, called oxysterols, stimulate specific immune cells in the large intestine, called innate lymphoid cells (ILCs), to form lymphoid tissue in both health and in disease.
“Our findings are relevant to humans because inflammatory lymphoid tissue contributes to tissue damage in inflammatory bowel disease. We have discovered that patients with ulcerative colitis have higher levels of oxysterol-producing enzymes than healthy controls. The results indicate that oxysterols and GPR183 are involved in ulcerative colitis,” he says.
One way to treat inflammatory bowel disease could, therefore, be to attempt to inhibit GPR183 or oxysterol production.
“This treatment option is attractive, because GPR183 belongs to a group of molecules that are excellent targets for drug treatment,” says Dr Willinger.
The study was published in the journal Immunity.
Photo of Tim Willinger: Emma Karlsson
Published: January 17, 2018
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