Author
Listed:
- Fränze Progatzky
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London)
- Navjyot J. Sangha
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London)
- Nagisa Yoshida
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London)
- Marie McBrien
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London)
- Jackie Cheung
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London)
- Alice Shia
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London
National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London)
- James Scott
(National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London)
- Julian R. Marchesi
(Computational and Systems Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London
Section of Hepatology, Imperial College London
Centre for Digestive and Gut Health, Imperial College London
School of Biosciences, Cardiff University)
- Jonathan R. Lamb
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London)
- Laurence Bugeon
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London)
- Margaret J. Dallman
(Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London)
Abstract
Prolonged ingestion of a cholesterol- or saturated fatty acid-enriched diet induces chronic, often systemic, auto-inflammatory responses resulting in significant health problems worldwide. In vivo information regarding the local and direct inflammatory effect of these dietary components in the intestine and, in particular, on the intestinal epithelium is lacking. Here we report that both mice and zebrafish exposed to high-fat (HFDs) or high-cholesterol (HCDs) diets develop acute innate inflammatory responses within hours, reflected in the localized interleukin-1β-dependent accumulation of myeloid cells in the intestine. Acute HCD-induced intestinal inflammation is dependent on cholesterol uptake via Niemann-Pick C1-like 1 and inflammasome activation involving apoptosis-associated Speck-like protein containing a caspase recruitment domain, which leads to Caspase-1 activity in intestinal epithelial cells. Extended exposure to HCD results in localized, inflammation-dependent, functional dysregulation as well as systemic pathologies. Our model suggests that dietary cholesterol initiates intestinal inflammation in epithelial cells.
Suggested Citation
Fränze Progatzky & Navjyot J. Sangha & Nagisa Yoshida & Marie McBrien & Jackie Cheung & Alice Shia & James Scott & Julian R. Marchesi & Jonathan R. Lamb & Laurence Bugeon & Margaret J. Dallman, 2014.
"Dietary cholesterol directly induces acute inflammasome-dependent intestinal inflammation,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 5(1), pages 1-14, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:5:y:2014:i:1:d:10.1038_ncomms6864
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms6864
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