| Literature DB >> 32661347 |
Beate Obermüller1,2, Noemi Frisina3, Martin Meischel3, Georg Singer4, Stefanie Stanzl-Tschegg3, Helga Lichtenegger3, Dagmar Kolb5,6, Ingeborg Klymiuk7, Holger Till2, Christoph Castellani2.
Abstract
Gut hyperpermeability can be caused by either apoptosis of the intestinal epithelium or altered status, permeability or porosity of tight junctions. This project aims to elucidate these mechanisms in the early phase of sepsis. Eighteen male wild type mice were randomized to two groups. All mice received one single gavage of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) dextran 30 min before intervention. One group (n = 10) underwent cecal ligation and puncture to induce sepsis. The other group (n = 8) was sham operated. Septic animals exhibited significantly increased permeability for FITC 8 h post-operatively. Significantly increased serum interleukin-6, tumor-necrosis-factor-alpha and interleukin-1-beta confirmed sepsis. Septic animals showed significant bowel wall inflammation of ileum and colon samples. PCR revealed significantly increased expression of claudin-2 and decreased expressions of claudin-4, tight-junction-protein-1 and occludin-1 resembling increased permeability of tight junctions. However, these alterations could not be confirmed at the protein level. Light microscopy revealed significant dilatation of intercellular spaces at the basal sections of intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) in septic animals confirmed by increased intercellular spaces at the level of tight junctions and adherens junctions in electron microscopy (TEM). In small angle X-ray scattering no increase in number or size of nanopores could be shown in the bowel wall. HOECHST staining and PCR of ileum samples for apoptosis markers proofed no relevant differences in intestinal epithelial cell apoptosis between the groups. Intestinal hyperpermeability in septic animals was most likely caused by alterations of the intercellular contacts and not by apoptosis or increased size/number of nanopores of intestinal epithelial cells in this murine model of early sepsis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32661347 PMCID: PMC7359326 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-68109-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Inflammatory cytokine serum levels in control and sepsis animals.
Figure 2Light and electron microscopy (CSEM and TEM) results. (A, B) 3D reconstruction-derived surface roughness (Ra) in ileum (A) and colon (B) (bar represents median, whiskers IQR). CSEM images of small intestine of a septic (C) and a control (D) mouse. Intercellular distances at Desmosome (E), AJ (F) and TJ level (G) (bar represents median, whiskers IQR). Bottom row: light microscopy of a control (H) and a septic (I) mouse (H&E staining, magnification × 400, scale bars represent 20 µm). Septic animals showed significantly increased intercellular distances at the basal levels of the IECs (J).
Figure 3Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). q versus intensity curves of ileum and colon of a septic (A) and a control mouse (B). Porod exponents of ileum (C) and colon (D) did not show significant differences.
Figure 4Tight junction and apoptosis protein RNA expression in fold-changes (sepsis versus control) normalized for housekeeping genes as determined by PCR analysis (A); an asterisk marks parameters with significant differences between sepsis and control group. ELISA for tight junction proteins (B–D).