Integrative analysis of Paneth cell proteomic and transcriptomic data from intestinal organoids reveals functional processes dependent on autophagy

Paneth cells are key epithelial cells that provide an antimicrobial barrier and maintain integrity of the small-intestinal stem cell niche. Paneth cell abnormalities are unfortunately detrimental to gut health and are often associated with digestive pathologies such as Crohn's disease or infections. Similar alterations are observed in individuals with impaired autophagy, a process that recycles cellular components. The direct effect of autophagy impairment on Paneth cells has not been analysed. To investigate this, we generated a mouse model lacking Atg16l1 specifically in intestinal epithelial cells, making these cells impaired in autophagy. Using three-dimensional intestinal organoids enriched for Paneth cells, we compared the proteomic profiles of wild-type and autophagy-impaired organoids. We used an integrated computational approach combining protein-protein interaction networks, autophagy-targeted proteins and functional information to identify the mechanistic link between autophagy impairment and disrupted pathways. Of the 284 altered proteins, 198 (70%) were more abundant in autophagy-impaired organoids, suggesting reduced protein degradation. Interestingly, these differentially abundant proteins comprised 116 proteins (41%) that are predicted targets of the selective autophagy proteins p62, LC3 and ATG16L1. Our integrative analysis revealed autophagy-mediated mechanisms that degrade key proteins in Paneth cell functions, such as exocytosis, apoptosis and DNA damage repair. Transcriptomic profiling of additional organoids confirmed that 90% of the observed changes upon autophagy alteration have effects at the protein level, not on gene expression. We performed further validation experiments showing differential lysozyme secretion, confirming our computationally inferred downregulation of exocytosis. Our observations could explain how protein-level alterations affect Paneth cell homeostatic functions upon autophagy impairment.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Source
Version
Authors
Maintainer
Maintainer Email
Article Host Type publisher
Article Is Open Access true
Article License Type cc-by
Article Version Type publishedVersion
Citation Report https://scite.ai/reports/10.1242/dmm.037069
DOI 10.1242/dmm.037069
Date Last Updated 2019-07-04T03:49:33.289651
Evidence open (via page says license)
Funder code(s) Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/J01754X/1, BB/J004529/1, BB/M011216/1, BB/CCG1720/1); Wellcome Trust (974/C/13/Z, 100); Medical Research Council (MR/P026028/1); Earlham Institute (BB/CSP17270/1); Quadram Institute (BB/P016774/1); Norwich Medical School ()
Journal Is Open Access true
Open Access Status gold
PDF URL https://dmm.biologists.org/content/dmm/12/3/dmm037069.full.pdf
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1242/dmm.037069