La Trobe

The emerging roles of autophagy in intestinal epithelial cells and its links to inflammatory bowel disease

journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-21, 00:35 authored by Sharon Tran, Juliani JulianiJuliani Juliani, Walter FairlieWalter Fairlie, Erinna LeeErinna Lee

Abstract:

Landmark genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identified that mutations in autophagy genes correlated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a heterogenous disease characterised by prolonged inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract, that can reduce a person's quality of life. Autophagy, the delivery of intracellular components to the lysosome for degradation, is a critical cellular housekeeping process that removes damaged proteins and turns over organelles, recycling their amino acids and other constituents to supply cells with energy and necessary building blocks. This occurs under both basal and challenging conditions such as nutrient deprivation. An understanding of the relationship between autophagy, intestinal health and IBD aetiology has improved over time, with autophagy having a verified role in the intestinal epithelium and immune cells. Here, we discuss research that has led to an understanding that autophagy genes, including ATG16L, ATG5, ATG7, IRGM, and Class III PI3K complex members, contribute to innate immune defence in intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) via selective autophagy of bacteria (xenophagy), how autophagy contributes to the regulation of the intestinal barrier via cell junctional proteins, and the critical role of autophagy genes in intestinal epithelial secretory subpopulations, namely Paneth and goblet cells. We also discuss how intestinal stem cells can utilise autophagy. Importantly, mouse studies have provided evidence that autophagy deregulation has serious physiological consequences including IEC death and intestinal inflammation. Thus, autophagy is now established as a key regulator of intestinal homeostasis. Further research into how its cytoprotective mechanisms can prevent intestinal inflammation may provide insights into the effective management of IBD.

Funding

Funding W.D.F. and E.F.L. are supported by the Australian Research Council (ARC) (Discovery Project Grant DP190102612) . E.F.L. is a fellowship recipient from the Victorian Cancer Agency (Mid-Career Fellowship MCRF19045) .

History

Publication Date

2023-04-26

Journal

Biochemical Society Transactions

Volume

51

Issue

2

Pagination

16p. (p. 811-826)

Publisher

Portland Press, Ltd.

ISSN

0300-5127

Rights Statement

© 2023 The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Portland Press Limited on behalf of the Biochemical Society and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY).

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