| Literature DB >> 27002817 |
Nathalie E Zeitouni1, Sucheera Chotikatum1, Maren von Köckritz-Blickwede2,3, Hassan Y Naim4.
Abstract
The maintenance of oxygen homeostasis in human tissues is mediated by several cellular adaptations in response to low-oxygen stress, called hypoxia. A decrease in tissue oxygen levels is initially counteracted by increasing local blood flow to overcome diminished oxygenation and avoid hypoxic stress. However, studies have shown that the physiological oxygen concentrations in several tissues are much lower than atmospheric (normoxic) conditions, and the oxygen supply is finely regulated in individual cell types. The gastrointestinal tract has been described to subsist in a state of physiologically low oxygen level and is thus depicted as a tissue in the state of constant low-grade inflammation. The intestinal epithelial cell layer plays a vital role in the immune response to inflammation and infections that occur within the intestinal tissue and is involved in many of the adaptation responses to hypoxic stress. This is especially relevant in the context of inflammatory disorders, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Therefore, this review aims to describe the intestinal epithelial cellular response to hypoxia and the consequences for host interactions with invading gastrointestinal bacterial pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: HIF-1α; Infection; Intestine; Invasion; Oxygen; β1 integrin
Year: 2016 PMID: 27002817 PMCID: PMC4803720 DOI: 10.1186/s40348-016-0041-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Pediatr ISSN: 2194-7791
Fig. 1Schematic of gut oxygen gradient. The intestine faces daily fluctuations in blood flow and a steep oxygen gradient is present, extending from the highly vascularized and oxygenated subepithelial mucosa (4–8 %), across the epithelial and mucous layer (2–4 %), and into the severely oxygen-deficient lumen (<2 %). Arterial blood oxygen content is approximated as 80–100 % while venal blood oxygen content is approximated as 20 % [1, 4, 5]
Fig. 2Intestinal tissue oxygen levels after infection or chronic inflammation. a One hour after infection, infiltration by neutrophils causes an increase in ROS production and subsequent decrease in oxygen levels, from 7 % to almost 5 %. Vasodilators are released to promote microvessel perfusion. Epithelial barrier is intact, and bacterial spread is contained. b As the infection progresses, pro-inflammatory cytokines are released and more PMNs are recruited to the tissue further decreasing local oxygen levels to less than 1 %. The epithelial layer is disrupted, and blood vessels become constricted because of clotting. Several hypoxia-dependent genes are upregulated. c In tissues with chronic inflammation, infiltrating neutrophils also lead to depletion of oxygen. Transcriptional changes in hypoxia-dependent genes along with aberrant vascularization create a severe hypoxic environment (2–4 %) [7, 8, 11]
Main gastrointestinal pathogens and their specific mode of entry
| Bacterial invasion | Pathogen | Host receptor/target | Mechanism | Internalization under hypoxia | Potential mechanism of hypoxia-induced changes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
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| β1-integrin | Signaling from Rac1 to Arp2/3 [ | ↓ [ | Decreased receptor protein expression, reduced glycosylation and mislocalization in lipid rafts [ |
|
| E-cadherin | Ligase Hakai recruitment, clathrin endocytosis, and activation of Arp2/3 actin complex [ | ↑ [ | Elevated expression of barrier protection genes, more increased levels of E-cadherin [ | |
|
| Met (hepatocyte growth factor receptor) | Activation of Met and PI-3-kinase-mediated signaling [ | ↑ [ | Increased expression of growth factor receptors [ | |
|
|
| Mammalian factor FXYD3 | Impairment of function of tight junctions [ | ↓ [ | Increased barrier protection, more stable adherens, and tight junctions [ |
|
| Cdc42, Rac1, Rho | Activation of target, membrane ruffling [ | ↓[ | Cytoskeleton rearrangements hinder membrane ruffling [ | |
|
| Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate PtdIns (4,5) P2 | Phosphoinositide signaling; membrane ruffling and formation of macropinosomes [ | ↑ [ | Changes in membrane lipid composition [ |
Fig. 3Hypothesized cellular adaptation models. Under normoxia, β1 integrins are properly glycosylated in the ER, are subsequently trafficked to the cell surface, and associate with lipid rafts. This allows binding to Yersinia enterocolitica invasin and bacterial internalization into host intestinal epithelial cell. Under hypoxia, HIF-1/hypoxia-induced ER stress and membrane alterations result in improper glycosylation and mislocalization of β1 integrins, thus reducing binding to and internalization of Y. enterocolitica