Abstract

Anterior gradient 2 (AGR2) is an epithelial protein disulfide isomerase critical for mucus production and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) homeostasis. Loss-of-function genetic variants in AGR2 are associated with Crohn’s disease (CD), and AGR2-deficient mice develop spontaneous ileocolitis, but the specificity of its impact on the host-microbe interaction driving disease is not well understood. Our new data reveals that AGR2 deficiency results in intestinal dysbiosis characterized by the expansion of adherent-invasive E. coli (AIEC). By re-deriving mice germ-free, we show that spontaneous ileocolitis is microbe-dependent and that AIEC isolates, but not other mucosa-associated microbes such as SFB, are sufficient to drive inflammatory disease in the absence of AGR2. AIEC induction of ER stress in AGR2-deficient mice enables further expansion of mucosal Enterobacteriaceae and is required for IL-23R-dependent Th17 cell ileocolitis. These findings reveal a central role for epithelial cell AGR2 in restraining ER stress induced by AIEC to prevent dysbiosis and inflammation in CD.

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