The kynurenine pathway regulated by intestinal innate lymphoid cells mediates postoperative cognitive dysfunction.

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Tác giả: Ling-Ke Chen, Xue-Mei Chen, Wan-Bing Dai, Xi-Yao Gu, Li-Li Huang, Xu-Liang Jiang, Lei Shen, Dian-San Su, Xiao-Yu Sun, Jie Tian, Wei-Tian Tian, Xiao-Dan Wu, Wei-Feng Yu, Xiao Zhang, Yi-Zhe Zhang, Xiao-Xin Zhou

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 521 Celestial mechanics

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Mucosal immunology , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 215295

Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a prevalent neurological complication that can impair learning and memory for days, months, or even years after anesthesia/surgery. POCD is strongly associated with an altered composition of the gut microbiota (dysbiosis), but the accompanying metabolic changes and their role in gut-brain communication and POCD pathogenesis remain unclear. Here, the present study reports that anesthesia/surgery in aged mice induces elevated intestinal indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) expression and activity, which shifts intestinal tryptophan (TRP) metabolism toward more IDO-catalyzed kynurenine (KYN) and less gut bacteria-catabolized indoleacetic acid (IAA). Both anesthesia/surgery and intraperitoneal KYN administration induce increased KYN levels that correlate with impaired spatial learning and memory, whereas dietary IAA supplementation attenuates the anesthesia/surgery-induced cognitive impairment. Mechanistically, anesthesia/surgery increases interferon-γ (IFN-γ)-producing group 1 innate lymphoid cells (ILC1) in the small intestine lamina propria and elevates intestinal IDO expression and activity, as indicated by the higher ratio of KYN to TRP. The IDO inhibitor 1-MT and antibodies targeting IFN-γ or ILCs mitigate anesthesia/surgery-induced cognitive dysfunction, suggesting that intestinal ILC1 expansion and the ensuing IFN-γ-induced IDO upregulation may be the primary pathway mediating the shift to the KYN pathway in POCD. The ILC1-KYN pathway in the intestine could be a promising therapeutic target for POCD.
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