| Literature DB >> 28769935 |
Angela M Patterson1,2, Alastair J M Watson1,2.
Abstract
Intestinal epithelial cells play a fundamental role in maintaining homeostasis. Shedding of intestinal cells in a controlled manner is critical to maintenance of barrier function. Barrier function is maintained during this shedding process by a redistribution of tight junctional proteins to facilitate closure of the gap left by the shedding cell. However, despite the obvious importance of epithelial cell shedding to gut health, a central question is how the extrusion of epithelial cells is achieved, enabling barrier integrity to be maintained in the healthy gut and restored during inflammation remains largely unanswered. Recent studies have provided evidence that excessive epithelial cell shedding and loss of epithelial barrier integrity is triggered by exposure to lipopolysaccharide or tumor necrosis factor alpha. Subsequent studies have provided evidence of the involvement of specific cellular components and signaling mechanisms as well as the functionality of microbiota that can be either detrimental or beneficial for intestinal barrier integrity. This review will focus on the evidence and decipher how the signaling systems through which the mucosal immune system and microbiota can regulate epithelial cell shedding and how these mechanisms interact to preserve the viability of the epithelium.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; intestinal epithelial cells; necroptosis; pyroptosis; shedding
Year: 2017 PMID: 28769935 PMCID: PMC5513916 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Intestinal epithelial cell shedding. (A) In health, epithelial cells migrate up the villus from the base of crypt to the tip. This is achieved through the crawling movement of the epithelial cells through epithelial–substratum interactions between integrins, heparin sulfate proteoglycans, and extracellular matrix. (B) At the villus tip, physiological cell shedding with redistribution of tight junctional proteins. (C) Pathophysiological cell shedding with multiple cells shed from a single site leading to barrier loss. (D) Immunological regulation of cell shedding. Under pathophysiological conditions, TNFα is released by γδIELs, macrophages (MØ), and intestinal epithelial cells (represented by red arrow) resulting in cell shedding. Pathways of cytokines secreted by intestinal epithelial cells, T cells, T regulatory cells (Tregs), and dendritic cells (DC) involved in intestinal epithelial barrier integrity are represented by black arrows, with dashes representing cytokines which have been identified but specific role in barrier integrity and subsequent regulation of cell shedding not yet defined.
Intestinal epithelial cell death processes involved in cell shedding (49–56).
| Apoptosis | Necroptosis | Pyroptosis | Necrosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caspase-3 +ve | Caspase-3 −ve | Caspase-3 −ve | Caspase-3 −ve |
| Caspase-1 −ve | Caspase-1 +ve | Caspase-1 +ve | Caspase-1 −ve |
| Tunnel +ve | Tunnel +ve | Caspase-11 (mouse) +ve | Annexin V +ve |
| Annexin V +ve | RIP3 +ve | Caspase-4 (human) +ve | Propidium iodide +ve |
| Propidium iodide −ve | RIPK-3 +ve | Caspase-5 (human) +ve | |
| Caspase-8 +ve | Gasdermin D +ve |