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Goblet of fire: how Chlamydia ignites region-specific colitis by hijacking goblet cells
Declan F. McCole
Declan F. McCole
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Commentary

Goblet of fire: how Chlamydia ignites region-specific colitis by hijacking goblet cells

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Abstract

Crohn’s disease can occur anywhere along the small and/or large intestines, but most commonly occurs in the terminal ileum or ascending colon. Factors governing this region-specific inflammation are poorly understood. In this issue of the JCI, Spencer et al. used a TNF-driven mouse model of small intestinal Crohn’s disease to identify a specific bacterial pathobiont, Chlamydia muridarum, as a necessary and sufficient driver of region-restricted inflammation. C. muridarum triggered increased goblet cell expression of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) in the mouse proximal colon, analogous to the human ascending colon. IDO1 metabolism of tryptophan stimulated increased levels of kyneurine, and suppression of this IDO1/kyneurine axis alleviated C. muridarum–provoked inflammation in the proximal colon but not the terminal ileum. Analysis of scRNA-seq datasets from patients with Crohn’s disease with ascending colon involvement also supported increased IDO1 expression in a subpopulation of crypt surface epithelial cells. The study highlights a process by which bacterial pathobionts promote region-specific intestinal inflammation.

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Declan F. McCole

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Figure 1

Microbial drivers of region-specific intestinal inflammation.

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Microbial drivers of region-specific intestinal inflammation.
Spencer et...
Spencer et al. (16) reported that in a TNF-driven mouse model of Crohn’s disease, C. muridarum preferentially colonized surface absorptive enterocytes in the proximal colon (analogous to the ascending colon in humans), leading to increased production of the cytosolic, heme-containing enzyme IDO1 by neighboring goblet cells, which are abundant in this region of the gastrointestinal tract. IDO1-mediated increases in tryptophan metabolism ultimately led to increased localized inflammation in a region-specific manner.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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