Herein, we report the first identification of biallelic-inherited mutations inALPIas a Mendelian cause of inflammatory bowel disease in two unrelated patients.ALPIencodes for intestinal phosphatase alkaline, a brush border metalloenzyme that hydrolyses phosphate from the lipid A moiety of lipopolysaccharides and thereby drastically reduces Toll-like receptor 4 agonist activity. Prediction tools and structural modelling indicate that all mutations affect critical residues or inter-subunit interactions, and heterologous expression in HEK293T cells demonstrated that allALPImutations were loss of function.ALPImutations impaired either stability or catalytic activity of ALPI and rendered it unable to detoxify lipopolysaccharide-dependent signalling. Furthermore, ALPI expression was reduced in patients' biopsies, and ALPI activity was undetectable in ALPI-deficient patient's stool. Our findings highlight the crucial role of ALPI in regulating host-microbiota interactions and restraining host inflammatory responses. These results indicate thatALPImutations should be included in screening for monogenic causes of inflammatory bowel diseases and lay the groundwork for ALPI-based treatments in intestinal inflammatory disorders.
CITATION STYLE
Parlato, M., Charbit‐Henrion, F., Pan, J., Romano, C., Duclaux‐Loras, R., Le Du, M., … Cerf‐Bensussan, N. (2018). Human ALPI deficiency causes inflammatory bowel disease and highlights a key mechanism of gut homeostasis. EMBO Molecular Medicine, 10(4). https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201708483
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.