Back to Search Start Over

Gut epithelial TSC1/mTOR controls RIPK3-dependent necroptosis in intestinal inflammation and cancer

Authors :
Jun Cui
Xia Chen
Ken Cadwell
Chen Yan
Huabin Li
Tiantian Li
Lei Shi
Hong Wei
Xiaoming Zhang
Min Li
Yu Matsuzawa-Ishimoto
Xiaomin Yao
Dianhui Shao
Qibin Leng
Hui Xiao
Yifan Zhao
Haiwei Zhang
Zunfu Ke
Shuzhong Cui
Xiaoxia Li
Haibing Zhang
Wei Li
Kun Chen
Yadong Xie
Jian Li
Source :
J Clin Invest
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2020.

Abstract

Although Western diet and dysbiosis are the most prominent environmental factors associated with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs), the corresponding host factors and cellular mechanisms remain poorly defined. Here we report that the TSC1/mTOR pathway in the gut epithelium represents a metabolic and innate immune checkpoint for intestinal dysfunction and inflammation. mTOR hyperactivation triggered by Western diet or Tsc1 ablation led to epithelium necroptosis, barrier disruption, and predisposition to dextran sulfate sodium-induced colitis and inflammation-associated colon cancer. Mechanistically, our results uncovered a critical role for TSC1/mTOR in restraining the expression and activation of RIPK3 in the gut epithelium through TRIM11-mediated ubiquitination and autophagy-dependent degradation. Notably, microbiota depletion by antibiotics or gnotobiotics attenuated RIPK3 expression and activation, thereby alleviating epithelial necroptosis and colitis driven by mTOR hyperactivation. mTOR primarily impinged on RIPK3 to potentiate necroptosis induced by TNF and by microbial pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), and hyperactive mTOR and aberrant necroptosis were intertwined in human IBDs. Together, our data reveal a previously unsuspected link between the Western diet, microbiota, and necroptosis and identify the mTOR/RIPK3/necroptosis axis as a driving force for intestinal inflammation and cancer.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Clin Invest
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f6423c58257df980784c2e708098dda4