| Literature DB >> 25592258 |
Len Verbeke1, Ricard Farre2, Bert Verbinnen3, Kris Covens4, Tim Vanuytsel5, Jan Verhaegen6, Mina Komuta7, Tania Roskams7, Sagnik Chatterjee8, Pieter Annaert8, Ingrid Vander Elst9, Petra Windmolders9, Jonel Trebicka10, Frederik Nevens9, Wim Laleman9.
Abstract
Bacterial translocation (BTL) drives pathogenesis and complications of cirrhosis. Farnesoid X-activated receptor (FXR) is a key transcription regulator in hepatic and intestinal bile metabolism. We studied potential intestinal FXR dysfunction in a rat model of cholestatic liver injury and evaluated effects of obeticholic acid (INT-747), an FXR agonist, on gut permeability, inflammation, and BTL. Rats were gavaged with INT-747 or vehicle during 10 days after bile-duct ligation and then were assessed for changes in gut permeability, BTL, and tight-junction protein expression, immune cell recruitment, and cytokine expression in ileum, mesenteric lymph nodes, and spleen. Auxiliary in vitro BTL-mimicking experiments were performed with Transwell supports. Vehicle-treated bile duct-ligated rats exhibited decreased FXR pathway expression in both jejunum and ileum, in association with increased gut permeability through increased claudin-2 expression and related to local and systemic recruitment of natural killer cells resulting in increased interferon-γ expression and BTL. After INT-747 treatment, natural killer cells and interferon-γ expression markedly decreased, in association with normalized permeability selectively in ileum (up-regulated claudin-1 and occludin) and a significant reduction in BTL. In vitro, interferon-γ induced increased Escherichia coli translocation, which remained unaffected by INT-747. In experimental cholestasis, FXR agonism improved ileal barrier function by attenuating intestinal inflammation, leading to reduced BTL and thus demonstrating a crucial protective role for FXR in the gut-liver axis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25592258 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2014.10.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Pathol ISSN: 0002-9440 Impact factor: 4.307