Neutrophil Plasticity and De Novo DUOX2 Expression in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Pathogenesis: A Review of Single-Cell Transcriptomic Advances and Therapeutic Strategies

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Abstract

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) arises from the interplay of genetic susceptibility, microbial dysbiosis, and dysregulated innate immunity, leading to chronic intestinal inflammation. Recent advances in single-cell and spatial multi-omics technologies have redefined neutrophils as highly heterogeneous and transcriptionally plastic cells rather than short-lived effectors. In the inflamed gut, cytokine gradients, hypoxia, and microbial metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids dynamically reprogram neutrophil states toward either protective or pathogenic phenotypes. Emerging evidence identifies de novo induction of the NADPH oxidase enzyme DUOX2 in intestinal neutrophils as a key driver of redox signaling, amplifying epithelial and immune activation through NF-κB and p38 MAPK pathways. This redox diversification enhances antimicrobial defense but also perpetuates dysbiosis, barrier dysfunction, and NET-associated thrombo-inflammation. Experimental models demonstrate that myeloid DUOX2 ablation mitigates colitis, supporting therapeutic strategies that target this axis—such as JAK/STAT inhibition, CXCR2 blockade, p38/MK2 modulation, or butyrate-based interventions—to recalibrate neutrophil function while preserving host protection. Integrating single-cell atlases, redox proteomics, and functional imaging will be essential to translate neutrophil plasticity into biomarker-guided, precision therapies for durable mucosal healing in IBD.

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