Litcius/Paper detail

Organoids transplantation attenuates intestinal ischemia/reperfusion injury in mice through L-Malic acid-mediated M2 macrophage polarization

Fang-Ling Zhang, Zhen Hu, Yifan Wang, Wenjuan Zhang, Bowei Zhou, Qi‐Shun Sun, Zebin Lin, Ke‐Xuan Liu

2023Nature Communications69 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Intestinal organoid transplantation is a promising therapy for the treatment of mucosal injury. However, how the transplanted organoids regulate the immune microenvironment of recipient mice and their role in treating intestinal ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury remains unclear. Here, we establish a method for transplanting intestinal organoids into intestinal I/R mice. We find that transplantation improve mouse survival, promote self-renewal of intestinal stem cells and regulate the immune microenvironment after intestinal I/R, depending on the enhanced ability of macrophages polarized to an anti-inflammatory M2 phenotype. Specifically, we report that L-Malic acid (MA) is highly expressed and enriched in the organoids-derived conditioned medium and cecal contents of transplanted mice, demonstrating that organoids secrete MA during engraftment. Both in vivo and in vitro experiments demonstrate that MA induces M2 macrophage polarization and restores interleukin-10 levels in a SOCS2-dependent manner. This study provides a therapeutic strategy for intestinal I/R injury.

Topics & Concepts

OrganoidTransplantationImmune systemMacrophage polarizationCell biologyReperfusion injuryIntestinal permeabilityCancer researchBiologyIntestinal mucosaIn vivoImmunologyMacrophageIn vitroIschemiaMedicineInternal medicineBiochemistryBiotechnologyClinical Nutrition and GastroenterologyImmune cells in cancerMesenchymal stem cell research