| Literature DB >> 27524860 |
Xiaopeng Tang1, Hu Liu1, Shufen Yang1, Zuohua Li1, Jinfeng Zhong2, Rejun Fang1.
Abstract
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) is a 53-amino acid peptide that plays an important role in regulating cell growth, survival, migration, apoptosis, proliferation, and differentiation. In addition, EGF has been established to be an effective intestinal regulator helping to protect intestinal barrier integrity, which was essential for the absorption of nutrients and health in humans and animals. Several researches have demonstrated that EGF via binding to the EGF receptor and subsequent activation of Ras/MAPK, PI3K/AKT, PLC-γ/PKC, and STATS signal pathways regulates intestinal barrier function. In this review, the relationship between epidermal growth factor and intestinal development and intestinal barrier is described, to provide a better understanding of the effects of EGF on intestine development and health.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27524860 PMCID: PMC4976184 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1927348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
The applications of EGF for animals on intestinal development.
| Animal | Dose | Significant results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fetal rabbit | 300 | EGF infusion significantly increased intrauterine growth retardation, fetal small intestinal villus height, and crypt cells | [ |
| Early-weaned pigs | 1.5 mg/kg | Increased the mucosa IgA levels and crypt depth at jejunum on day 28 after weaning | [ |
| Early-weaned mice | 50 | Increased mean villous height and crypt depth and enhanced enterocyte proliferation | [ |
| 1-day-old, large white-duroc cross breed piglets | 10 | Stimulates proliferation of intestinal crypt epithelial cells and promotes recovery from atrophic enteritis in PEDV-infected piglets | [ |
| Early-weaned pigs | 1.0 | Failed to alter the small intestinal villus morphology, DNA, or protein content of gastrointestinal mucosa | [ |
| Early-weaned pigs | 50 | Greater jejunal and duodenal villus heights; greater intestinal length | [ |
| Early-weaned pigs | 180 | Increased villous height in the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum | [ |
| Early-weaned pigs | 115 | Enhanced jejunal structure development, increased villi height, and decreased lamina propria width | [ |
| Early-weaned pigs | 180 | Increased villus height and increased the intestinal structural integrity proteins expression | [ |
| Early-weaned pigs | 60 | Enhanced mean villous height, crypt depth, and villous height: crypt depth and stimulated proliferation of piglet enterocytes | [ |
| Early-weaned rats | 50 | Enhanced mean villous height, crypt depth, total protein, DNA, and RNA and stimulated enterocytes proliferation | [ |
Figure 1Tight junction structures. The tight junction is organized by multiple transmembrane proteins, including junctional adhesion molecules (JAM), occludin, claudins, and zona occludens (ZO), which interact in a coordinated manner to form intestinal barriers.
The effects of EGF on EGF-mediated protection of tight junctions.
| Cell lines | Inducer | TJ associated proteins | Involved pathways | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caco-2 | Hydrogen peroxide | Increased in tubulin polymerization | PKC- | [ |
| Caco-2 | Hydrogen peroxide | Increased in tubulin polymerization and decreased in monomeric tubulin | PKC- | [ |
| Caco-2 | Hydrogen peroxide | Increased F-actin-to-G-actin ratio | PKC- | [ |
| Caco-2 | Acetaldehyde | Occludin ↑; ZO-1 ↑1 | Inhibited tyrosine phosphorylation | [ |
| Caco-2 | Hydrogen peroxide | F-actin ↑; G-actin ↓ | PLC- | [ |
| Caco-2 | Hydrogen peroxide | Occludin ↑; ZO-1 ↑ | ERK-MAPK | [ |
| Caco-2 | Acetaldehyde | Occludin ↑; ZO-1 ↑ | Not mentioned | [ |
| Caco-2 | Acetaldehyde | Occludin ↑; ZO-1 ↑ | PLC- | [ |
| Caco-2 | Acetaldehyde | Occludin ↑; ZO-1 ↑ | ERK1/2-MAPK | [ |
| NRC-1 cells3 | Hydrogen peroxide | ZO-1 ↑; claudin-3 ↑ | PLC- | [ |
| MCAS4 | None | Claudin-3 ↓ | MEK/ERK or | [ |
| HUOA5 | Claudin-4 ↓ | |||
| MDCK6 | None | Claudin-4 ↑ | MEK/ERK | [ |
| MDCK | None | Claudin-2 ↓; claudin-4 ↑ | Src and STAT3 | [ |
1Symbols ↑ and ↓ indicate increases and decreases in the protein or mRNA expression, respectively. 2Symbols ↑ and ↓ stand for activation and inhibition, respectively. 3Cholangiocytes. 4Mucinous cystadenocarcinoma. 5Serous cystadenocarcinoma. 6Darby canine kidney cells.
Figure 2The EGFR-phospholipase (PLC)-γ-PKC and EGFR-ERK/MAPK signaling pathways are involved in EGF-mediated protection of tight junctions. ERK/MAPK pathways were mainly involved in regulating barrier function by improving the gene expression of tight junction proteins such as ZO-1, claudin-1, and occludin, while PLC-γ-PKC pathways were mainly involved in regulating actin cytoskeletal architecture such as F-actin and G-actin.
Figure 3Mechanism of EGF induced mucins secretion. EGF treatment can increase the expression of interleukin-13 and keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) that resulted in an increased Muc2 expression [15]. EGF through inducing DUOX2 expression and ROS production to activate ERK1/2-PKC pathways thus inducing Muc5AC and Muc3 expression [42].
Effects of EGF on intestinal bacterial colonization and translocation.
| Animals | Significant results | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| New Zealand white rabbits | EGF treatment significantly inhibits enteropathogenic | [ |
| Newborn rabbits | Administration of EGF significantly reduced bacterial translocation and was associated with increased goblet cells in intestine | [ |
| Rats | Administration of EGF significantly reduced aerobic bacterial colonization | [ |
| White leghorn chicks | EGF reduced | [ |
| Rats | An intervention with EGF decreased fecal | [ |
| Early-weaned piglets | EGF treatment decreased the amount of | [ |