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Intestinal IL-22RA1 signaling regulates intrinsic and systemic lipid and glucose metabolism to alleviate obesity-associated disorders

  • Stephen J. Gaudino
  • , Ankita Singh
  • , Huakang Huang
  • , Jyothi Padiadpu
  • , Makheni Jean-Pierre
  • , Cody Kempen
  • , Tej Bahadur
  • , Kiyoshi Shiomitsu
  • , Richard Blumberg
  • , Kenneth R. Shroyer
  • , Semir Beyaz
  • , Natalia Shulzhenko
  • , Andrey Morgun
  • , Pawan Kumar
  • Stony Brook University
  • Oregon State University
  • Harvard University
  • Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

IL-22 is critical for ameliorating obesity-induced metabolic disorders. However, it is unknown where IL-22 acts to mediate these outcomes. Here we examine the importance of tissue-specific IL-22RA1 signaling in mediating long-term high fat diet (HFD) driven metabolic disorders. To do so, we generated intestinal epithelium-, liver-, and white adipose tissue (WAT)-specific Il22ra1 knockout and littermate control mice. Intestinal epithelium- and liver-specific IL-22RA1 signaling upregulated systemic glucose metabolism. Intestinal IL-22RA1 signaling also mediated liver and WAT metabolism in a microbiota-dependent manner. We identified an association between Oscillibacter and elevated WAT inflammation, likely induced by Mmp12 expressing macrophages. Mechanistically, transcription of intestinal lipid metabolism genes is regulated by IL-22 and potentially IL-22-induced IL-18. Lastly, we show that Paneth cell-specific IL-22RA1 signaling, in part, mediates systemic glucose metabolism after HFD. Overall, these results elucidate a key role of intestinal epithelium-specific IL-22RA1 signaling in regulating intestinal metabolism and alleviating systemic obesity-associated disorders.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1597
JournalNature Communications
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

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