The significant bidirectional comorbidity risk and extensive subclinical involvement observed between chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) underscore the pivotal role of the “gut-lung axis” in cross-organ pathological crosstalk. Here, we comprehensively review the molecular and immunological mechanisms driving this comorbidity.
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have substantiated genetic pleiotropy that underpins a shared susceptibility to mucosal defense deficits. The “common mucosal immune system” (CMIS), rooted in embryonic homology, constitutes the anatomical basis for this pathological interplay, wherein aberrant immune cell homing, Th17/Treg imbalance, and the cross-organ trafficking of innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) mediate the distal dissemination of inflammation.
Furthermore, gut dysbiosis-induced depletion of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), acting in concert with systemic hypoxia and the IL-23/IL-17 axis, potentiates synergistic injury to the gut-lung barriers. We highlight the reciprocal, bidirectional causality of this “hypoxic loop” and its testable mechanistic predictions for barrier dysfunction.
Furthermore, we evaluate pharmacological evidence from drug repositioning, alongside a critical examination of the “hidden axis” of clinical therapies as profound iatrogenic confounders.
Frontiers in Immunology published a clinical update in Infectious Disease on 22 Apr 2026.
The item focuses on The gut-lung axis: pathological crosstalk and inter-organ communication in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and inflammatory bowel disease.
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