Study of Tissue Repair in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Exploiting Organoid Technology
NCT06805890 · Status: RECRUITING · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 60
Last updated 2025-08-22
Summary
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) are chronic inflammations of the gastrointestinal tract. Regardless of the etiology, a common trait of IBD pathogenesis is the inflammatory damage inflicted on the intestinal mucosa and the loss of intestinal epithelial barrier integrity. Therefore, understanding the mechanisms that govern IEC's capacity to maintain barrier function and to orchestrate mucosal healing is considered a major goal in translational research. The investigators are interested in understanding how the inflammatory environment present in the intestinal mucosa, of IBD patients influences epithelial cells capacity to govern repair. The complexities of the cytokine and metabolic milieu present in IBD patients render the study of the contribution of each cytokine, metabolite, and intracellular pathway extremely complicated. Therefore, most of the processes that govern tissue regeneration are studied with the use of mouse models that recapitulate one or multiple features of IBD and allow for genetical modifications of the gene and pathway of interest. While mouse models are uniquely suited to study the complex crosstalk between the immune system, the microbiota, and the intestinal epithelia, they introduce the important problem of species-specific differences, which can hamper the translational value of mouse studies.
To overcome these shortcomings, the investigators propose to explore the influence of cytokines and metabolites in digestive organoids derived from patients and controls. Importantly, it was demonstrated that gene expression and innate immune responses are altered in primary organoids derived from patients with IBD, including altered ability to proliferate, respond to cytokines, metabolic capacity, and efficiently form organoids suggesting that major differences between patient's and control's epithelial cell biology can be faithfully replicated in this system.
Given these premises, the investigators propose the following objectives:
Primary objective:
The main objective of this study is to establish that patient's epithelial cells from inflamed mucosae have decreased ability to repair the intestinal mucosa, as compared to epithelial cells from non-inflamed regions in the same patient, or to control subject with no inflammatory digestive diseases.
The investigators will explore this question both deriving organoids from clinical samples and exposing them to pro inflammatory cytokines and metabolites in vitro, as well as by analyzing repair responses from the aforementioned clinical samples ex vivo.
Secondary objective
The secondary goals of this study are:
\- To compare organoids derived from: epithelia in inflamed mucosa of IBD patients, epithelia in non-inflamed mucosa of IBD patients, and epithelia from the mucosa of non-IBD controls in their capacity to mount a repair response in response to inflammatory cytokines or luminal metabolites.
Namely the investigators will evaluate the following parameters:
* Their capacity to proliferate.
* Their ability to survive treatment with pro-inflammatory cytokines
* The activation of intracellular pathways associated with cell death.
* Their overall metabolic activity.
* The balance between stem and differentiated epithelial cell types.
* The transcriptional activation of protective pathways such as those associated with proliferation, migration, differentiation and cell survival.
* To evaluate hallmarks of tissue repair in biopsies derived from epithelia in inflamed mucosa of IBD patients, epithelia in non-inflamed mucosa of IBD patients, and epithelia from the mucosa of non-IBD controls, and to correlate them to the levels of inflammatory cytokines, luminal metabolites and overall disease severity. Namely the investigators will evaluate the following parameters:
* The abundance of proliferating cells.
* The activation of intracellular pathways associated with cell death and survival.
* Their overall metabolic activity.
* The balance between stem and differentiated epithelial cell types.
* The transcriptional activation of protective pathways such as those associated with proliferation, migration, differentiation and cell survival.
Conditions
- Crohn Disease
- Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD)
- Ulcerative Colitis (Disorder)
Interventions
- PROCEDURE
-
Colonoscopy - IBD inflamed tissue
Collection of 10 colonic biopsies in IBD inflamed tissue
- PROCEDURE
-
Surgical resection - IBD inflamed mucous membrane
Collection of a portion of IBD inflamed mucous membrane
- PROCEDURE
-
Colonoscopy - biopsies in healthy tissue
Collection of 10 colonic biopsies in healthy tissue
- PROCEDURE
-
Surgical resection - healthy mucous membrane
Collection of a portion of healthy mucous membrane
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Assistance Publique Hopitaux De Marseille
lead OTHER
Study Design
- Allocation
- NON_RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- BASIC_SCIENCE
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2025-07-24
- Primary Completion
- 2027-03-24
- Completion
- 2027-03-24
Countries
- France
Study Locations
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