McMaster scientists pinpoint key trigger of Crohn’s disease

Embargoed by Science Advances until Friday, November 5, 2021, at 2 p.m. EDT

Hamilton, ON (Nov. 5, 2021) – A new treatment may be on the horizon for people with a major form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) called Crohn’s disease, after a McMaster University-led study identified serotonin as a possible trigger of flare-ups.

Scientists discovered that increased levels of serotonin hormones prevent gut cells from carrying out autophagy, the routine ‘housework’ of the gut cleaning out damaged or malfunctioning cellular components.

Researchers gleaned their results by analyzing blood and biopsy samples from two groups totalling 18 people with Crohn’s disease, comparing them to a matching number of people from two healthy control groups. A mouse model of IBD was also used.

Senior author Waliul Khan said the resulting autophagy dysfunction has been implicated in triggering IBDs such as Crohn’s disease, as well as other conditions such as diabetes and Parkinson’s disease.

“The serotonin is manufactured by hormone-producing cells called enterochromaffin cells, located near the gut bacteria, which are very important in triggering IBDs. They are located so closely to each other that it may influence the gut microbiome,” said Khan, a professor at McMaster’s Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine and a principal investigator of Farncombe Family Digestive Health Research Institute.

“We have shown the mechanism of how serotonin is increasing the inflammation in IBDs and acts as a brake on cell autophagy, changing the composition of gut bacteria, which subsequently leads to the production of more inflammatory cytokines and more severe disease.”

Serotonin itself is an important signalling molecule that regulates the brain’s responses to anxiety and stress, but 95 per cent of it is found in the gut, where its exact role is unclear.

Khan said his study was the first demonstration of the interaction between serotonin, autophagy and gut microbiota in intestinal inflammation. The paper was published by Science Advances today. Sabah Haq, a PhD student who works with Khan, is first author.

Khan said his discovery comes as Crohn’s disease affects millions of people worldwide and the numbers continue to climb, burdening individuals, societies and health-care systems. He added that increasing rates of urbanization and industrialization could be causing this increase.

“In Canada the prevalence of IBDs is one of the highest in the world. Recently there has been significant process in in understanding the pathogenesis of IBD leading to improved strategies to control inflammation through the use of immunosuppressive drugs and biologics, but there is still no cure and even these treatments often cause many side-effects,” said Khan.

The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

 

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Editors:

 

Pictures of Waliul Khan may be found at https://bit.ly/3mphSWu

 

A post-embargo link to the paper is available at https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abi6442

 

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