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Patient-derived enteroids provide a platform for the development of therapeutic approaches in microvillus inclusion disease

Journal of Clinical Investigation, ISSN: 1558-8238, Vol: 133, Issue: 20
2023
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Microvillus inclusion disease: From organoids to new treatments

Microvillus inclusion disease (MVID) is a rare type of congenital enteropathy in infants that causes devastating diarrhea and an inability to absorb food. Infants can

Article Description

Microvillus inclusion disease (MVID), caused by loss-of-function mutations in the motor protein myosin Vb (MYO5B), is a severe infantile disease characterized by diarrhea, malabsorption, and acid/base instability, requiring intensive parenteral support for nutritional and fluid management. Human patient–derived enteroids represent a model for investigation of monogenic epithelial disorders but are a rare resource from MVID patients. We developed human enteroids with different loss-of function MYO5B variants and showed that they recapitulated the structural changes found in native MVID enterocytes. Multiplex immunofluorescence imaging of patient duodenal tissues revealed patient-specific changes in localization of brush border transporters. Functional analysis of electrolyte transport revealed profound loss of Na/H exchange (NHE) activity in MVID patient enteroids with near-normal chloride secretion. The chloride channel–blocking antidiarrheal drug crofelemer dose-dependently inhibited agonist-mediated fluid secretion. MVID enteroids exhibited altered differentiation and maturation versus healthy enteroids. γ-Secretase inhibition with DAPT recovered apical brush border structure and functional Na/H exchange activity in MVID enteroids. Transcriptomic analysis revealed potential pathways involved in the rescue of MVID cells including serum/glucocorticoid-regulated kinase 2 (SGK2) and NHE regulatory factor 3 (NHERF3). These results demonstrate the utility of patient-derived enteroids for developing therapeutic approaches to MVID.

Bibliographic Details

Kalashyan, Meri; Raghunathan, Krishnan; Oller, Haley; Bayer, Marie-Theres; Jimenez, Lissette; Roland, Joseph T; Kolobova, Elena; Hagen, Susan J; Goldsmith, Jeffrey D; Shub, Mitchell D; Goldenring, James R; Kaji, Izumi; Thiagarajah, Jay R

American Society for Clinical Investigation

Medicine

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