key: cord-0926414-ma7tsm68 authors: Pott, Johanna; Stockinger, Silvia title: Type I and III Interferon in the Gut: Tight Balance between Host Protection and Immunopathology date: 2017-03-14 journal: Front Immunol DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00258 sha: fac028a97db9169282fd01c3ca41d4eb7afb3f5c doc_id: 926414 cord_uid: ma7tsm68 The intestinal mucosa forms an active interface to the outside word, facilitating nutrient and water uptake and at the same time acts as a barrier toward the highly colonized intestinal lumen. A tight balance of the mucosal immune system is essential to tolerate harmless antigens derived from food or commensals and to effectively defend against potentially dangerous pathogens. Interferons (IFN) provide a first line of host defense when cells detect an invading organism. Whereas type I IFN were discovered almost 60 years ago, type III IFN were only identified in the early 2000s. It was initially thought that type I IFN and type III IFN performed largely redundant functions. However, it is becoming increasingly clear that type III IFN exert distinct and non-redundant functions compared to type I IFN, especially in mucosal tissues. Here, we review recent progress made in unraveling the role of type I/III IFN in intestinal mucosal tissue in the steady state, in response to mucosal pathogens and during inflammation. The intestinal tract is a major entry site for viruses and bacteria. Mucosal innate and adaptive immune cells are equipped to respond to and fight invading pathogens. At the same time, the intestinal lumen is densely colonized by commensal microflora, which at steady state does not provoke an exacerbated inflammatory response. The intestinal lumen is separated from the underlying sterile lamina propria harboring the body's largest immune cell compartment by a single layer of polarized intestinal epithelial cells (IECs). This epithelial cell layer undergoes rapid and perpetual self-renewal without disrupting the functional integrity of cell-cell junctions. In addition, IECs not only form a passive physical barrier but also participate actively in the immune response against major enteric pathogens and cross talk with the commensal flora (1, 2) . However, pathogenic viruses, bacteria, and parasites exploit opportunities for breaching the epithelial barrier. Upon infection, host cells communicate by means of production and secretion of signaling molecules. Interferons (IFN) are a large family of cytokines with diverse functions during a successful host defense. The family of type I IFN comprises more than 20 members with multiple IFN-α and one IFN-β being the most important. Classically, the most prominent function of type I IFN is to induce antiviral immunity, whereas IFN-γ, the only type II IFN, promotes the response to intracellular bacteria. However, a vast amount of studies has found that type I IFN are also produced during bacterial infection. In contrast to their action in viral infections, their activity against bacteria can be either favorable or detrimental for the host (3) (4) (5) (6) . Recently, a novel family of IFN, the type III IFN or IFN-λ family, was described (7, 8) . This family consists of IFN-λ1, IFN-λ2, IFN-λ3 (also called IL-29, IL-28A, and IL-28B), and IFN-λ4 in humans, whereas mice have only two functional genes encoding IFN-λ (Ifnl2 and Ifnl3) and two Ifnl1 pseudogenes (9) . Similar to type I IFN, type III IFN are induced by viral infection and show antiviral activity. However, they are structurally distinct from type I IFN and interact with a heterodimeric class II cytokine receptor consisting of the IFN-λR1 (also called IL-28Rα) chain in complex with the IL-10R2 chain, opposed to the type I IFN receptor (IFNAR). A number of studies have addressed the functional importance of type III IFN compared to type I IFN in the context of viral infections (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) . Less is known about the role of type I IFN and almost nothing on the role of type III IFN in the host defense against bacterial enteropathogens, intestinal homeostasis, and colitis. Therefore, we review recent progress made on the importance of type I and III IFN during enteric viral infections and focus on the role of type I IFN in the intestinal mucosal tissue during steady state, in response to bacterial infections and during inflammation. The induction of type I and III IFN has been recently reviewed elsewhere (16) , therefore we will only briefly summarize the major mechanism leading to IFN expression. Virtually all cells are equipped with the machinery to recognize viral infection and express type I and III IFN in response. Similar stimuli and pathways lead to the expression of type I and III IFN; however, differences between cell types as well as in magnitude and kinetics have been described (14, 16, 17) . Comparable expression patterns of type I and III IFN result from a similar requirement of transcription factors for the expression of their encoding genes, such as IFN regulatory factors (IRFs) and NF-κB. There are however some differences in the promoter region, with IFN-β expression relying on the binding of the constitutively expressed IRF-3 to its promoter, which allows rapid induction. By contrast, IFN-α requires IRF-7 binding, which is an interferon-stimulated gene (ISG) itself and needs to be upregulated in most cell types following infection (3) . Type III IFN are more dependent on the activation of NF-κB (18) and require the combined action of IRFs and NF-κB for full induction (19) (20) (21) . During systemic viral infections hematopoietic cells are the major source of type I IFN. Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs), which are designated as being the "professional" type I IFN-producing cells, produce large amounts in response to a wide range of viruses, parasites, and bacteria and are particularly important in the early phase of type I IFN production (22) (23) (24) . However, depending on the infectious agent, myeloid cells are also involved in systemic type I IFN production. During systemic Listeria infection, the vast amount of systemic IFN-β production is independent of pDCs but seems to be produced by LysM-Cre-expressing macrophage/monocyte-like cells including TipDCs but not neutrophils (25) (26) (27) . In the intestinal lamina propria, dendritic cells (DCs) as well as mononuclear phagocytes produce IFN-β and IFN-α5 in the steady state (14, 23, 28) . Epithelial cells are thought to be the major producer of type III IFN at steady state and during enteric viral infection, while lamina propria leukocytes (LPLs) also produce type III IFN under certain conditions (14, 29) . Intraepithelial lymphocytes produce IFN-α and IFN-λ upon TCR activation, which contributes to protection during norovirus infection (30) . Moreover, Th17 cells are the main source of IFN-λ in psoriatic lesions of the skin (31) . Bacteria trigger similar intracellular signaling cascades to viral infections and many bacterial infections lead to the production of type I IFN [reviewed in Ref. (32, 33) ]. Induction of type III IFN has been demonstrated only for a limited number of bacterial species. A human epithelial colon cancer cell line expresses type III IFN upon infection with Gram-positive bacteria such as Listeria monocytogenes (34, 35) , Staphylococcus aureus, and Enterococcus faecalis but fails to produce considerable amounts of type III IFN when infected with Gram-negative bacteria such as Salmonella enterica ssp. Typhimurium, Shigella flexneri, and Chlamydia trachomatis (35) . Induction seems to be cell type, species, and gene specific (36, 37) . Binding of IFN to their corresponding receptors triggers the stimulation of a Janus kinase (JAK)-signal transducer of transcription (STAT) pathway. The type I IFN receptor (IFNAR) consists of two subunits, IFNAR1 and IFNAR2. Engagement of IFNAR with its ligand ultimately results in the activation of the transcription factor complex ISGF3 comprised of STAT1/STAT2 heterodimers in conjunction with IRF-9 and subsequently the induction of ISGs (3, 38) . The type III IFN receptor consists of the unique IFN-λR1 chain and the IL-10R2 chain, which is shared with the IL-10 receptor. Engagement of this receptor complex results in the activation of a signal transduction cascade in a manner highly similar to that caused by type I IFN signaling. Interestingly, signaling by type III IFN is additionally regulated at the level of receptor expression. Whereas IFNAR is ubiquitously present, the IFN-λR1 chain of the type III IFN receptor is only expressed in a limited number of cell types, preferentially located at mucosal surfaces. Epithelial cells in mucosal tissues are a major target of type III IFN (39, 40) . Additional responsiveness to type III IFN has recently been suggested for a restricted panel of immune cells (9) . Type III IFN was proposed to have a role in the direct regulation of NK cell effector function (41) . A suppressive function of type III IFN in autoimmune and inflammatory diseases was also proposed recently. In a model of collagen-induced arthritis, treatment with type III IFN inhibits the recruitment of IL-1β-expressing neutrophils, which have been shown to express high levels of IFN-λR1 and respond directly to type III IFN (42) . In addition, there are controversial data on the responsiveness of T cells, DCs, and monocytes to type III IFN (9) . In human cells, expression of the type III IFN receptor seems to be less restricted than in mouse cells and a wider panel of immune cells, including B cells, is responsive to type III IFN (43) . (52) Signaling by IFNs induces the transcription of hundreds of ISGs. These include pattern-recognition receptors, antiviral effectors such as myxovirus resistance (Mx) gene 1 and 2, pro-apoptotic genes, MHC class I genes, inducible nitric oxide synthase, and genes encoding members of the GTPase superfamily which alter the maturation of phagosomes to counteract pathogen strategies based on survival in intracellular compartments. Moreover genes involved in the desensitization to IFNs are also induced, allowing cells to recover from the IFN response (38, 44) . The importance of IFNs in the immediate defense against pathogens has been shown by the generation of gene-targeted mice. Mice deficient in components of the type I IFN signal transduction pathway are highly susceptible to a variety of viruses (5, 45) . The role of type I IFN in bacterial infections is more complex. Whereas type I IFN protect mice against systemic infection with most extracellular bacteria tested, they exacerbate disease during infection of mice with L. monocytogenes or Mycobacterium tuberculosis (3) (4) (5) (6) . Studies investigating the functional importance of type I IFN versus type III IFN in the context of systemic viral infections found a dominant phenotype for type I IFN and only a small contribution of type III IFN in the absence of type I IFN. The first indication for a tissue-specific role of type III IFN arose from studies with organ-tropic viral infections suggesting that type III IFN are important in enforcing and strengthening the antiviral response at mucosal sites ( Table 1 ) (10) (11) (12) (46) (47) (48) . The gastrointestinal tract, lung, vagina, and salivary glands respond strongly to systemic IFN-λ expression (40) . In the lung and gastrointestinal tract, epithelial cells were identified to express high levels of the type III IFN receptor and represent the major target of type III IFN (11) . These findings explain why mice deficient for both IFN systems are more susceptible to lung-tropic viruses, such as influenza A and B virus, respiratory syncytial virus, and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus than single type I IFN receptor-deficient mice (11) . The remaining part of this section focuses on the role of type III IFN in enteric viral infections. Rotavirus belongs to the family of reoviridae and infection of humans leads to severe diarrhea in children younger than 5 years. The susceptibility of infants can be recapitulated in a mouse model, where suckling mice are highly susceptible to infection compared to adult mice. The strict host cell tropism of rotavirus for IECs makes it a clean model to study epithelial-specific effects of IFN. Mice can be infected with a homologous strain of murine rotavirus or with a heterologous strain such as rhesus or simian rotavirus. Homologous strains are better equipped to evade the host immune response, which generally leads to higher viral titers and a more severe pathology at a lower infectious dose (49) . A protective role of type I IFN and IFN-γ has been questioned, since mice impaired in type I IFN or IFN-γ signaling infected with a murine rotavirus strain do not show differences in viral load, and treatment with either type I IFN or IFN-γ did not result in a clinical benefit (53) . However, simian and rhesus rotavirus show enhanced systemic replication in mice deficient for type I IFN and IFN-γ receptor or STAT1. By contrast, type III IFN were protective in a homologous infection model of suckling and adult mice (12) . Of note, a very distinct cell tropism for type III IFN responsiveness in the intestine was reported: IECs were solely activated by type III IFN and are not responsive to type I IFN, whereas cells in the lamina propria respond to type I IFN induced during viral infection (12) . Supporting these findings it was shown that IL-22 augments the antiviral effects of type III IFN signaling and contributes to the protective effect during homologous rotavirus infection (29) . However, this model has been questioned by another study reporting type I IFN-and type III IFN-mediated protection only for heterologous but not for homologous rotavirus infection of suckling mice (50) . Experimental discrepancies between those studies are not apparent suggesting that flora differences between mouse facilities or genetic strategy of the knock-out mouse lines might impact on the efficacy of IFN signaling. Of note, Lin et al. reported age-dependent responsiveness of IECs toward IFNs with neonatal IECs being responsive to both type I IFN and type III IFN, whereas adult IECs were responsive to type III IFN only (50) . Norovirus is the cause of the majority of non-bacterial gastroenteritis in adults. In contrast to rotavirus, the host cell tropism of norovirus is broad and not fully characterized. Ex vivo and most in vivo studies could not show productive virus replication in IECs (54) . Phagocytes allow productive virus replication and during in vivo infection, virus was detected in LPLs (54, 55) . Although the virus does not replicate in IECs, it has been suggested that it translocates across the epithelium or enters the host via M cells (56) . Type I IFN and IFN-γ restrict murine norovirus replication in macrophages and DCs in vitro (57, 58) . In vivo, the antiviral activity of type I IFN mediates some protection from systemic replication of an acute strain (51) and after high-dose oral infection (59) . However, local replication in the colon and fecal shedding of a persistent norovirus strain is controlled by type III IFN. Treatment with type III IFN resolves persistent infection, independent of adaptive immune responses, by acting on nonhematopoietic cells (15) . By contrast, type I IFN controls the systemic spread and persistency of the acute norovirus strain CW3 by activation of the host DCs (48) . These findings demonstrate the distinct cell-type specificities of type I IFN and type III IFN during infection: local protection in the colon through type III IFN stimulation of epithelial cells and prevention of systemic spread and persistency by type I IFN in myeloid cells. The commensal bacterial flora was reported to promote norovirus persistency in the intestine and antibiotic treatment of mice prevented persistent infection with norovirus. The protective effect was only observed in the presence of functional type III IFN signaling (13) . The antibiotic treatment did not alter type III IFN signaling and therefore the authors concluded that the microflora might render the virus susceptible to the antiviral action of type III IFN. Alternatively, the absence of type III IFN signaling might increase the host's vulnerability to persistent viral infection so dramatically that minor changes by antibiotic treatment do not impact on the overall susceptibility under those conditions. can spread further during infection. Type I IFN produced by hematopoietic cells is essential to limit systemic spread of the virus and to prevent lethality (60) . In a study using type I IFN or type III IFN signaling-deficient mice, it was demonstrated that type III IFN signaling specifically prevents replication of the virus in IECs, whereas type I IFN signaling limits replication in lamina propria cells and systemic spread of the virus (14) . This study confirms the compartmentalized action of IFN in the intestinal mucosa and provides an explanation by showing that IECs only express low levels of IFNAR (Figure 1 ). Furthermore, it was shown that the production of IFN is cell type specific in that IECs produce higher levels of type III IFN and LPLs predominantly produce type I IFN. Taken together, the studies of enteric viral models with rotavirus, reovirus, and norovirus show a strong and specific responsiveness of IECs to type III IFN (12, 15, 29) . Therefore, type III IFN might specifically enforce the intestinal barrier against enteric viruses and also against viral entry via the intestinal route. Additionally, a strong IFN response by type III IFN signaling within the epithelial lining prevents viral spreading (12, 14, 15) . Studies showing that type III IFN treatment protects against oral EMCV (52) infection but not from systemic infection (47) support the conclusion that type III IFN protects the host not only from enteric viruses but also from viral entry via the oral route. By contrast, the contribution of type I IFN to the epithelial antiviral response in the intestine is less clear and conflicting results suggest it to be context dependent (12, 29, 50) . In contrast to viral infections where type I IFN and/or type III IFN usually provide an efficient host defense by triggering the production of antiviral genes, the role of type I/III IFN in the antibacterial response depends on the pathogen and the route of infection (3, 4, 61) . Type I IFN signaling protects against most extracellular bacteria tested but is detrimental in the course of infection with a range of intracellular bacteria [ Table 2 ; reviewed in Ref. (61) ]. Most of the pioneering studies unraveling the potential detrimental action of type I IFN in the antibacterial response have been performed using systemic infection models with L. monocytogenes [reviewed in Ref. (4) ]. More recent studies, however, have proposed that the impact of type I IFN on the outcome of disease depends on the route of infection (65) . Mice deficient in IFNAR1, IFN-β, IRF-3, or IRF-7 are more resistant to systemic infections with L. monocytogenes than wildtype mice (25, 62, 64, 78) . A number of mechanistic explanations for this phenotype exist, including increased death of crucial effector cells such as macrophages and T cells in response to type I IFN signaling (64, 78, 79) , upregulation of IL-10 in an type I IFNdependent manner limiting protective inflammatory responses (80, 81) , and a negative cross talk between type I IFN and IFN-γ signaling (82) . In contrast to the clear detrimental effects of type I IFN in systemic L. monocytogenes infections, the role of type I IFN in oral L. monocytogenes infection has only been addressed by a limited number of studies mainly due to the lack of a suitable mouse model. For the uptake into IECs, specific interaction between the Listeria virulence factor internalinA (InlA) and E-cadherin expressed on IECs is required. InlA recognizes E-cadherin from human but fails to bind the corresponding domain of murine E-cadherin (83) . A knock-in mouse ubiquitously expressing "humanized" E-cadherin provides a model for oral Listeria challenge (84) . Infected germ-free colonies of this mouse line develop systemic listerosis, which can be dampened by administration of Lactobacilli (85) . Lactobacilli treatment downregulates immune gene expression and in particular ISGs, which are among the most highly induced genes after L. monocytogenes infection (85) . Kernbauer et al. used a "murinized" L. monocytogenes strain LO28 expressing altered InlA recognizing mouse E-cadherin to show that, in sharp contrast to systemic infection, type I IFN signaling in response to both high-dose and low-dose intragastric L. monocytogenes infection is beneficial for the host. Diminished restriction of bacterial growth in the absence of type I IFN signaling resulted in exacerbated hepatic inflammation and damage (65) . Different results were obtained by a more recent study using an EGDe derivative strain expressing "murinized" InlA (66) . Contrasting systemic infection, which leads to strong type I IFN secretion, oral infection with this strain did not trigger robust type I IFN induction in splenocytes even when comparable bacterial burdens were present in the spleen. Neither major T cell depletion nor increased splenic IL-10 production was observed in this model and the detected infection-induced downregulation of the IFN-γ receptor on DCs and macrophages was not dependent on type I IFN signaling. Consequently, no major differences between wild-type and IFNAR1-deficient mice orally infected with L. monocytogenes where detected in this study (66) . The discrepancies between the Kernbauer and the Pitts study might Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium causes gastroenteritis and is one of the most frequent causes of bacterial foodborne disease in Western countries, representing a major economic problem (86) . Oral infection of laboratory mice with S. Typhimurium causes typhoid-like symptoms without clinical signs of gastroenteritis and can be used to study genetic determinants of systemic infections. IFN-β −/− mice show increased resistance to S. Typhimurium in lethality and bacterial spread in this model (67, 68) . The natural microbiota of the mouse gut is able to outcompete Salmonella to occupy this ecological niche. Thus, a new model of typhlocolitis was developed employing streptomycin treatment to deplete commensal bacteria and to overcome the colonization resistance of mice. This infection model leads to a rapid induction of inflammation in cecum and colon (87, 88) . An influence of type I IFN signaling on the immune response to S. Typhimurium infection has been suggested during the analysis of Usp18-deficient mice (69, 89) . USP18 is a deubiquinating protease with de-ISGylation activity specific for ISG15. It also limits JAK-STAT activation and is thus involved in the negative regulation of type I IFN signaling. During systemic Salmonella infection, increased STAT1 activation correlated with impaired STAT4 activation and reduced IFN-γ production, and Usp18 mutant mice are more susceptible to systemic (i.e., typhoid) S. Typhimurium infection (89) . By contrast, in the streptomycin-induced model of typhlocolitis, mutant Usp18 mice display lower pathology scores, low IFN-γ production but upregulated type I IFN signaling compared to control mice, resulting in earlier systemic dissemination of the bacteria and decreased survival (69) . Interestingly, influenza-induced type I IFN suppress host intestinal immunity leading to increased susceptibility to secondary Salmonella-induced colitis (68) . Influenza-induced type I IFN strongly inhibited the induction of antimicrobial and inflammatory genes such as IFN-γ, S100A9, and lipocalin-2 in response to secondary S. Typhimurium infection causing increased intestinal colonization and increased bacterial dissemination but reduced immunopathology (68) . In summary, these studies suggest a detrimental effect of type I IFN on the growth and dissemination of bacteria in Salmonella-induced typhlocolitis whereas it limits intestinal inflammation. These effects are more obivous when type I IFN production is boosted by influenza infection or polyI:C treatment (68) . Additional studies are required to determine the direct and indirect effects of type I IFN on S. Typhimurium-induced typhlocolitis. Moreover, the role of type III IFN in this model has yet to be addressed. The role of type I or III IFN in other enteric bacterial infections [e.g., enteropathogenic (EPEC) and enterohemorrhagic (EHEC) Escherichia coli, Citrobacter rodentium, Campylobacter jejuni, or Yersinia enterocolitica] has not been extensively addressed in in vivo infection models. Citrobacter rodentium and EPEC developed immune evasion strategies targeting type I IFN signaling, suggesting a protective effect of type I IFN against those pathogens. C. rodentium has been reported to actively inhibit epithelial type I IFN production employing a mechanism depending on the type III secretion system (T3SS) (90) . Furthermore, it also reduces type I IFN signaling by decreasing nuclear translocation of phosphorylated STAT1 even after co-stimulation with IFN-β (90) . Infection of a colon cancer cell line with EPEC results in a modest IFN-β production, which regulates tight junction proteins such as claudin 1 and occludin to maintain barrier function (91) . Using a distinct mechanism to C. rodentium, an EPEC T3SS effector, NleD, reduces IFN-β induction by inhibition of RNase L, ultimately resulting in evasion of antibacterial activities and disruption of barrier function (91) . Type I IFN also play a protective role during oral Y. enterocolitica infection. TRIF-deficient mice are highly susceptible to Y. enterocolitica infection with increased bacterial spread and lethality. This could be prevented by IFN-β treatment of TRIFdeficient mice and IFNAR blocking of wild-type mice recapitulates increased bacterial burden (70) . Campylobacter jejuni infection of murine DCs leads to TLR4/ TRIF-dependent activation of IRF-3 and secretion of type I IFN and cooperative signaling through both TLR4/MyD88 and TLR4/TRIF pathways is required for full Th1 priming ability (92) . Interestingly, production of type I IFN and other cytokines in splenic tissue is significantly increased by lipo-oligosaccharide (LOS) sialylation (93) . Whether type I IFN and/or type III IFN responses to sialylated C. jejuni have a role in oral infection models of mice awaits further investigation. Recently, novel mouse models have been developed relying on the eradication or modification of the murine gut microbiota using broad-spectrum antibiotic treatment and subsequent re-association with a complex human microbiota. This approach leads to stable colonization with C. jejuni and a proinflammatory response in the colons of infected mice (94) . Hopefully, these models will provide the necessary tools to answer the questions of an in vivo importance of type I IFN and/or type III IFN in the mucosal immune response to C. jejuni. This will be of particular importance since type I IFN responses have also been observed in former C. jejuni-infected patients suffering from Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), an autoimmune neuropathy where infection with C. jejuni is the most common predisposing factor (95) . C. jejuni LOS activates TLR4 and high responsiveness of DCs isolated from former GBS patients was hypothesized to influence the development of GBS. Indeed, although a strong variability in DC responses to LOS was observed, the frequency of CD38, CD40, and type I IFN high responders was significantly increased in the C. jejunirelated former GBS patients compared to controls (95) . Intestinal homeostasis is dependent on the tight interplay between the host and commensal flora. The flora directly protects the host from intestinal pathogens by competition for nutrients and space. Furthermore, commensal bacteria are important for the development of the immune system and maintenance of the barrier. The host immune system has also a great influence on the composition of the microbiota (96) . Several studies have suggested that IFN signaling influences cross talk between the host and the flora. It has long been recognized that the microbiota of different inbred mouse strains changes over time despite shared origin, which has been attributed to host genetic factors (97) . Geneexpression analysis of the colonic mucosa revealed that IFNresponsive genes are differentially regulated between the different mouse strains and might thus contribute to microbiota regulation (97) . Indeed, microbiota analysis of mice with selective ablation of type I IFN signaling in the intestinal epithelium revealed changes of the microbiota composition if littermates were housed separately for 8-12 weeks (76) . However, it is not known whether this is a direct effect of type I IFN signaling by the epithelium and what the mechanistic relationship is. The community stability of the gut microbiota might also depend on IFN signaling (98) . IRF-9-deficient mice unable to respond to either type I IFN or type III IFN displayed a significantly higher temporal variation than wild-type mice, which was accompanied by an increased presence of T cells and neutrophils. However, STAT1-deficient mice, which classically are unable to respond to type I IFN, type III IFN, and IFN-γ, were not significantly different from wild-type mice implicating that a previously unrecognized pathway might be involved (98) . Indeed, a role for IRF-9 in non-canonical IFN signaling and beyond the IFN response has been suggested (99) . Recently, Deriu et al. reported that systemic influenza-induced type I IFN production significantly alters the intestinal microbiota profile (68) . While under their experimental conditions uninfected wild-type and IFNAR1-deficient mice displayed similar fecal microbial communities, influenza infection-induced type I IFN signaling resulted in a depletion of indigenous segmented filamentous bacteria and enhanced colonization with Enterobacteriaceae (68) . Type III IFN signaling on its own does not have a strong effect on the flora composition, as 16S rDNA sequencing of the V4 region of fecal pellets from wild-type or IFN-λR1 −/− mice revealed similar bacterial class composition (13) . It is important to note that microbiota studies are difficult to control and generalizations from one specific study should be drawn carefully as major differences have been found between mouse facilities. Upon colonization of germ-free mice with a two-component bacterial community, IFN-responsive genes are strongly upregulated in cecal epithelia (100) . Several studies have also demonstrated a role for commensalinduced tonic type I IFN signaling in the steady state to keep the host in a state of alertness against a systemic viral infection (101) (102) (103) . Mononuclear phagocytes isolated from non-mucosal lymph nodes of germ-free mice are unable to upregulate type I IFN genes after stimulation with microbial ligands and thus fail to prime NK cells and antiviral immunity (102) . A second study came to similar conclusions demonstrating decreased antiviral gene expression and defective ISG expression of macrophages from antibiotic-treated mice (101) . The nature of the commensal bacterial species or microbial product responsible for the tonic type I IFN production is unknown and its identification remains a future challenge. Recently, a connection between the increased susceptibility of liver cirrhosis patients to bacterial infections and tonic type I IFN signaling was made (81) . In a murine model of liver fibrosis, translocated gut bacteria induced the expression of a tonic type I IFN signature in the liver, which in turn conditioned myeloid cells to produce vast amounts of type I IFN upon subsequent systemic infection with L. monocytogenes. Type I IFN signaling resulted in the production of IL-10 by myeloid cells, which hampered antibacterial immunity. Key findings of the murine model such as a type I IFN signature in cirrhotic livers and myeloid IL-10 production could also be recapitulated in human patient material. Thus, tonic type I IFN signaling induced by the translocated gut microbiota can also have detrimental effects (81) . Plasmacytoid dendritic cells are known to be important producers of type I IFN after viral infections and treatment with bacterial nucleic acids. Interestingly, pDCs derived from Peyers's patches are incapable of producing significant amounts of type I IFN after stimulation with CpG-enriched oligodeoxynucleotides while producing IL-12 (104) . Thus, although tonic type I IFN production by myeloid cells fulfils important functions to maintain basal levels of ISGs (81, 101, 102) , the mucosal microenvironment prevents production of vast amounts of type I IFN by pDCs-presumably to prevent harmful immune responses to commensal microorganisms (104) . Other sources of type I IFN in the GALT are stromal cells. Indeed stroma-derived type I IFN has been shown to induce APRIL and BAFF expression by pDCs, which facilitates T cell-independent IgA production by mucosal B cells (105) . Of note, the expression of ISGs at steady state seems to be driven by type I IFN and type III IFN in a cell type-specific manner. The cells of the lamina propria are mainly activated by type I IFN whereas IECs respond mainly to baseline levels of type III IFN due to low IFNAR expression on IECs, which is in accordance with the response pattern observed during viral infection (Figure 1) (14) . Furthermore, the role of altered type I IFN signaling on IECs was addressed by several groups (50, 76, 106) . Tschurtschenthaler and colleagues reported that the lack of type I IFN signaling in IECs leads to a hyperproliferative phenotype (76) . Particularly the secretory cell types Paneth and goblet cells are expanded in a setting where IECs are the only cells impaired in type I IFN signaling (Villin-Cre Ifnar fl/fl ). Although this study suggests that type I IFN signaling occurs in IECs, the proliferative phenotype is secondary due to alterations of the microflora, as cohousing of the mice resolved the differences (76). Katlinskaya et al. used a model of decreased IFNAR degradation in IECs to study type I IFN signaling outcome in IECs (107) . CK1α can phosphorylate IFNAR1, which subsequently leads to its degradation (108) . Genetic ablation of CK1α in IECs leads to increased IFNAR levels and elevated type I IFN signaling in the epithelium. CK1α deficiency also results in β-catenin activation, which leads to hyperproliferation of the epithelium and loss of barrier function where type I IFN signaling is additionally blocked. Elevated type I IFN signaling, however, inhibits β-catenin-driven proliferation and induces apoptosis maintaining barrier integrity (107) . In another model of chronically elevated levels of systemic type I IFN, epithelial cell turnover was increased in various tissues including the intestine (106). This effect was not due to direct signaling of type I IFN in epithelial cells but by induction of Apol9a/b in macrophages or stromal cells that subsequently promoted the turnover of epithelial cells (106) . Taken together, epithelial type I IFN signaling seems to have a pleiotropic effect depending on levels of receptor expression, ligand abundance, microflora, and tissue context. Experiments employing different murine models of colitis such as dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) colitis or the T cell transfer model have provided a complex picture of the role of type I/ III IFN in intestinal inflammation. Administration of DSS in the drinking water leads to disruption of the epithelial barrier and an inflammatory reaction to microbial patterns and food antigens. The T cell transfer model on the other hand relies on the transfer of naive CD4 + T cells into immune-deficient mice (e.g., RAG −/− mice), which undergo activation and proliferation in response to microbial products to provoke inflammatory colitis when a suppressive T cell population (Foxp3 + Tregs) is absent (109, 110) . Katakura et al. investigated the role of type I IFN induction after administration of CpG ODN in experimental colitis (73) . Mice deficient in type I IFN signaling are resistant to the CpG ODN-mediated effect and are more susceptible to DSS treatment than wild-type mice, suggesting a protective effect of type I IFN signaling. By contrast, a therapeutic approach employing a transgenic Lactobacillus acidophilus strain constitutively expressing IFN-β (La-IFN-β) failed to protect against DSS-induced colitis but exacerbated the disease (74) . Colitic mice pretreated with La-IFN-β displayed increased production of proinflammatory cytokines and decreased numbers of Tregs in their small intestine. In vitro, maturation of bone-marrow-derived DCs with La-IFN-β resulted in a threefold reduction of IFNAR1 and an impaired ability to induce Tregs (74) . Thus, although a correlation between downregulation of IFNAR1 on DCs and exacerbation of colitis was observed, pretreatment of colitic mice with La-IFN-β surprisingly also resulted in increased intestinal damage (74) . These results suggest that a tight regulation of type I IFN signaling is important for the balance of intestinal homeostasis. The effect of type I IFN in experimental colitis might depend on the severity of inflammation and opposing roles in specific phases of intestinal damage and inflammation have been proposed (75, 111) . At high DSS concentrations, type I IFN signaling protected against acute intestinal damage presumably by suppressing the release of IL-1β from colonic MHC class II + cells (75) . In the recovery phase after DSS treatment, type I IFN signaling resulted in delayed recovery from intestinal inflammation accompanied by increased cell apoptosis as well as an increase in chemokine production and subsequent infiltration of neutrophils and inflammatory monocytes (75) . The potential of type I IFN signaling to either suppress acute colitis or delay the recovery might provide an explanation for the varying effects of type I IFN treatment on inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) patients. Several groups have analyzed the effect of type I IFN signaling on T cells (23, 71, 72, 112) . CD69 is suggested to be a regulator of intestinal homeostasis and is highly expressed on intestinal CD4 + T cells, which at steady state is driven by the microflora but can be further induced by type I IFN signaling (72, 113) . Poly(I:C) treatment during T cell transfer colitis attenuates colitis by IFNAR-dependent CD69 induction on T cells, which leads to downregulation of proinflammatory cytokine levels (72) . Furthermore, Lee et al. identified a protective role of T cell type I IFN signaling by regulating the expression of Foxp3 and the suppressive effect of Tregs (71) . Whereas Tregs isolated from wildtype mice suppressed colitis when cotransferred with naïve CD4 + T cells, the same cell population derived from IFNAR1 −/− mice failed to do so. Although Tregs undergo normal development in IFNAR1 −/− mice, the cells acquire a dysfunctional phenotype accompanied with reduced Foxp3 expression when cotransferred with naive CD4 + T cells into RAG1 −/− recipients. Administration of recombinant IFN-α ameliorated T-cell-dependent colitis by augmenting the number of Foxp3 + Tregs suggesting a potential therapeutic application of type I IFN in intestinal inflammation (71, 72, 113) . By contrast, several studies suggested an indirect effect of TLR9 ligands and type I IFN signaling for protection in T cell-mediated experimental colitis (23, 99, 112) . While a role for B cells was excluded, colitis-reducing effects of CpG ODN were mediated by CD11c + cells and required functional type I IFN signaling in a model of T cell transfer colitis (112) . Kole et al. showed that colon mononuclear phagocytes deficient in type I IFN signaling failed to produce regulatory cytokines such as IL-10, IL-27, and IL-1RA in response to TLR activation. Furthermore in the T cell transfer colitis model, IFNAR signaling of host hematopoietic cells was important to limit effector cell expansion and to promote the stabilization of Foxp3 + Tregs (23) . Intestinal epithelial cells and in particular Paneth cells have also been proposed to be a target of type I IFN signaling in the intestine (76, 114) . Paneth cells are epithelial cells located at the bases of small-intestinal crypts specialized in secretion of antimicrobial peptides and factors to sustain epithelial stem cells and progenitor cells (115) . Mice with a specific deletion of IFNAR1 in IECs display expansion of Paneth cell numbers and epithelial hyperproliferation when compared with wild-type littermates. Although epithelial-specific deletion of IFNAR1 did not impact on the severity of spontaneous or DSS-induced intestinal inflammation, they exhibited increased tumor burden in the azoxymethane/DSS model of colitis-associated colon cancer (76) , Both spontaneous epithelial hyperproliferation and tumor promotion are dependent on the microbial flora, since differences between wild-type and IEC-specific IFNAR1deficient mice were only apparent if the mice were housed separately (76) . Human and murine IECs display high responsiveness to type III IFN treatment (12, 116) . A recent study has demonstrated a protective role of type III IFN signaling in DSS-induced colitis (77) . Mice deficient for the type III IFN receptor lost significantly more weight and suffered from significantly increased intestinal damage after DSS treatment when compared to WT controls. Additional loss of the type I IFN receptor did not change the pathology scores compared to the single loss of type III IFN receptor, emphasizing a prominent role of type III IFN signaling in this model. The protective effect of type III IFN signaling is independent of potential changes in the microbiota since the same results were obtained when wild-type and type III IFN signaling-deficient mice were cohoused for 3 weeks (77). The IBD, comprising Crohn's disease (CD), and ulcerative colitis (UC) are chronic debilitating inflammatory disorders of the gastrointestinal tract. IBD affects about 0.2% of Western populations and there is no current cure, typically requiring long-term treatment with immune suppressive agents and, in many cases, surgical intervention. Although the etiology remains unclear, IBD is thought to arise due to aberrant immune responses to components of the commensal bacterial microbiota (117) . Recent genome-wide association studies have identified more than 160 genetic susceptibility loci for IBD, with affected genes involved in immunity and in barrier function (118) . Many of those single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are found in genes associated with pathogenic cytokine circuits, such as the Th17/IL23 circuit, IL-10, and type I IFN-I signaling (119) . The majority of signaling mediators are shared between different cytokine signaling cascades and therefore exact determination of the relevant pathways is impossible from the genetic data only. Interestingly, several of the IBD-associated genes are also involved in the type I IFN signaling pathway. The rs2284553 SNP is commonly associated with the IFNGR2 gene but could also affect the IFNAR1 gene (118) . JAK2, TYK2, STAT1, and STAT3 genes harbor identified SNPs and are signaling mediators in many cytokine pathways such as IL-22, IL-10, and also type I/III IFN. Furthermore, polymorphisms in the MDA5 or IRF5 gene might alter the production of type I/III IFN (118) . Although the type I IFN signaling network is not one of the major players in IBD pathology, slight alterations may contribute to the imbalanced immune response at the lamina propria, as suggested by mouse studies. Indeed, Giles and colleagues analyzed the responsiveness of T cells from healthy controls and IBD patients to IFN-β and found that IFN-β signaling modulates colonic T cell responses in a context-dependent manner. Human colonic T cells were responsive to exogenous IFN-β and endogenous IFN-β influenced the cytokine profile of ex vivo cultured T cells. T cells from healthy controls produced decreased levels of IL-10 in the absence Type I and III Interferon in the Gut Frontiers in Immunology | www.frontiersin.org March 2017 | Volume 8 | Article 258 of IFN-β signaling whereas T cells from IBD patients produced elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines (120) . Interferons-β has been approved for the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS); however, a subset of patients does not respond to the treatment. Axtell and colleagues analyzed the effect of IFN-β on different Th subsets and found that IFN-β treatment in a mouse model of EAE attenuates disease development in a Th1driven pathology, but had no effect or even exacerbates pathology in Th17-driven disease. Furthermore, they could correlate high IL-17-F serum levels in MS patients to non-responsiveness toward IFN-β treatment. These findings confirm the immunomodulatory role of IFN-β but also demonstrate the diverse consequences it has in different context with opposing effects within a Th1 and Th17 setting (121) . Despite the varying results from mouse studies on the role of type I IFN in colitis and the discrepancy between type I IFN effects on suppressing acute colitis and delaying recovery (74, 75) , type I IFN have been suggested for the treatment of IBD. Several small studies have evaluated the consequences of IFN-β1a in IBD patients with varying results (122) (123) (124) (125) (126) (127) (128) . Although small pilot studies suggested a beneficial outcome of type I IFN treatment of IBD patients (123, 124) , a placebo-controlled, double-blind study on Crohn's patients in remission did not find any improvement by IFN-β1a treatment on the maintenance of remission (127) . Also two randomized placebo-controlled studies in UC patients with active disease could not show a beneficial effect of IFN-α or IFN-β1 treatment on disease remission (125, 126) . A small study analyzing cytokine levels before and after treatment with IFN-β1a found a correlation between responsiveness and reduction of IL-13 levels in UC patients. The unresponsiveness to IFN-β1 treatment correlated with elevated levels of IL-17 in accordance with the findings in MS patients (121, 128) . Taken together, these studies do not support a beneficial outcome of type I IFN treatment during IBD. This conclusion was also drawn in a recent intervention review analyzing all trial data published on the effectiveness of type I IFN treatment on remission in UC patients (129) . However, considering the analysis of IFN-β non-responsiveness of patients with MS (121), context-specific responsiveness of T cells toward type I IFN (120) , and controversial findings in mouse studies (23, 74, 75) , the effect of the treatment might vary between Th profiles of patients and a careful pre-selection of patients would be required. Further studies with sufficient patient numbers and thorough analysis of immunological and disease parameters are required. Celiac disease is a small-intestinal enteropathy characterized by an aberrant T cell-mediated immune response of susceptible individuals to dietary gluten. The pathogenic adaptive immune response is initiated by the interplay between gluten and the MHC class II molecules HLA-DQ2 and DQ8 and is characterized by a potent Th1 response. The excessive tissue destruction is further driven by a severe IEL hyperplasia targeting IECs. Histologically, celiac disease is characterized by villous flattening, crypt hyperplasia, and IEL infiltration. Affected individuals can present with very variable symptoms ranging from asymptomatic to severe symptoms ascribed to impaired absorption of nutrients (130) . The strongest genetic factor for the disease is HLA-DQ2 and DQ8; however, it is now recognized that further immune-regulatory or activating factors are required for disease establishment. Several celiac disease susceptibility loci in genes associated with innate immune responses have been identified, suggesting a role for innate immunity in the development of the disease (131) . An influence of type I IFN on the development of celiac disease has been widely discussed. Indeed, a number of case studies reported on the development of diarrhea and the onset of celiac disease during treatment with IFN-α for chronic hepatitis C patients (132) (133) (134) (135) (136) (137) . A retrospective study of 534 hepatitis C patients with or without symptoms of celiac disease showed an activation of silent celiac disease in the majority of patients positive for transglutaminase antibodies while on IFN therapy (138) . The immunomodulatory properties of type I IFN might worsen underlying autoimmune disorders and monitoring of hepatitis C patients for celiac disease before starting an IFN therapy has been suggested. A potential role of cotreatment with ribavirin, which promotes a Th1-mediated immune response while suppressing Th2 responses, has also been discussed (133) . The high prevalence of celiac disease in HCV patients treated with IFN-α was investigated in a study including 210 chronic hepatitis C patients. This study failed to detect a significant association of celiac disease and HCV infection and in addition came to the conclusion that IFN-α therapy per se does not trigger celiac disease in patients negative for endomysium (EMA) and tissue transglutaminase (139) . It does not however rule out that IFN-α treatment might trigger the development of celiac disease in susceptible individuals. To investigate the underlying mechanisms, explant cultures of human fetal gut were analyzed after activation of T cells with anti-CD3 and IFN-α. While single treatment with either anti-CD3 or IFN-α alone did not trigger any profound changes, the combination of both resulted in enhanced Th1 responses and crypt cell hyperplasia associated with enhanced STAT1, STAT3, and FYN phosphorylation. IFN-α treatment might thus facilitate activation of Th1-reactive cells and trigger immunopathology (135, 140) . Onset of celiac disease-like symptoms have also been observed in a case of chronic myeloid leukemia treated with IFN-α again suggesting a role of type I IFN in promoting Th1 responses to gluten (135) . Also, IFN-α protein was detected in duodenal tissue of celiac disease patients but not in control samples (135) . Further studies are required to determine whether a direct link exists between type I IFN signaling and celiac disease. Although important progress has been made in recent years, additional studies are required to deepen our understanding of the role of type I IFN and type III IFN in the gut. Type I IFN signaling in enteric viral infections is mostly protective, whereas it can be detrimental in certain enteric bacterial infections. The clinical data using type I IFN for colitis treatment are partly contradictory and a larger number of patients are required to obtain conclusive results. With the exception of some viral infection and colitis models, where type III IFN signaling is mostly protective, the data on illuminating the role of type III IFN signaling in the gut are generally scarce. It is now well established that epithelial cells are especially responsive to type III IFN, which enforces the mucosal barrier and prevents viral entry and infection. Less clear is the non-responsiveness of the epithelium to type I IFN observed under several conditions (Figure 1) . What benefit do epithelial cells gain from the decreased responsiveness? Can receptor expression levels and localization fully explain reduced type I IFN responsiveness in the epithelium? The narrow range of cells responding to type III IFN makes it an attractive target for future clinical studies with increased specificity and fewer side effects than type I IFN. JP and SST wrote the manuscript. The authors would like to acknowledge Erwin Bohn for the antibody against IFIT3. They also thank Theodore Sanders and Dagmar Stoiber for critical reading of the manuscript. JP is supported by the MRC project grant MR/N02379X/1. 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Eur Frontiers in Immunology | www The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.