Type 2 and type 17 effector cells are increased in the duodenal mucosa but not peripheral blood of patients with functional dyspepsia

Grace L. Burns, Jessica K. Bruce, Kyra Minahan, Andrea Mathe, Thomas Fairlie, Raquel Cameron, Crystal Naudin, Prema M. Nair, Michael D.E. Potter, Mudar Zand Irani, Steven Bollipo, Robert Foster, Lay T. Gan, Ayesha Shah, Natasha A. Koloski, Paul S. Foster, Jay C. Horvat, Martin Veysey, Gerald Holtmann, Nick PowellMarjorie M. Walker, Nicholas J. Talley, Simon Keely*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Functional dyspepsia is characterised by chronic symptoms of post-prandial distress or epigastric pain not associated with defined structural pathology. Increased peripheral gut-homing T cells have been previously identified in patients. To date, it is unknown if these T cells were antigen-experienced, or if a specific phenotype was associated with FD. Objective: This study aimed to characterise T cell populations in the blood and duodenal mucosa of FD patients that may be implicated in disease pathophysiology. Methods: We identified duodenal T cell populations from 23 controls and 49 Rome III FD patients by flow cytometry using a surface marker antibody panel. We also analysed T cell populations in peripheral blood from 37 controls and 61 patients. Where available, we examined the number of duodenal eosinophils in patients and controls. Results: There was a shift in the duodenal T helper cell balance in FD patients compared to controls. For example, patients had increased duodenal mucosal Th2 populations in the effector (13.03 ± 16.11, 19.84 ± 15.51, p=0.038), central memory (23.75 ± 18.97, 37.52 ± 17.51, p=0.007) and effector memory (9.80±10.50 vs 20.53±14.15, p=0.001) populations. Th17 populations were also increased in the effector (31.74±24.73 vs 45.57±23.75, p=0.03) and effector memory (11.95±8.42 vs 18.44±15.63, p=0.027) subsets. Peripheral T cell populations were unchanged between FD and control. Conclusion: Our findings identify an association between lymphocyte populations and FD, specifically a Th2 and Th17 signature in the duodenal mucosa. The presence of effector and memory cells suggest that the microinflammation in FD is antigen driven.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1051632
Number of pages14
JournalFrontiers in Immunology
Volume13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Jan 2023
Externally publishedYes

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