| Literature DB >> 33946184 |
Esther Bankole1, Emily Read1, Michael A Curtis1, Joana F Neves1, James A Garnett1.
Abstract
Mucins are a family of glycosylated proteins which are the primary constituents of mucus and play a dynamic role in the regulation of the protective mucosal barriers throughout the human body. Ulcerative colitis (UC) is an Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) characterised by continuous inflammation of the inner layer of the large intestine, and in this systematic review we analyse currently available data to determine whether alterations exist in mucin activity in the colonic mucosa of UC patients. Database searches were conducted to identify studies published between 1990 and 2020 that assess the role of mucins in cohorts of UC patients, where biopsy specimens were resected for analysis and control groups were included for comparison. 5497 articles were initially identified and of these 14 studies were systematically selected for analysis, a further 2 articles were identified through citation chaining. Therefore, 16 studies were critically reviewed. 13 of these studies assessed the role of MUC2 in UC and the majority of articles indicated that alterations in MUC2 structure or synthesis had an impact on the colonic mucosa, although conflicting results were presented regarding MUC2 expression. This review highlights the importance of further research to enhance our understanding of mucin regulation in UC and summarises data that may inform future studies.Entities:
Keywords: Inflammatory Bowel Disease; MUC; intestine; mucin; mucosa; ulcerative colitis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33946184 PMCID: PMC8125602 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10091935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Flow chart showing steps of search process leading to the inclusion of articles for analysis. Boolean operators and search modifiers were using to optimise the retrieval of articles in the search strategy: ‘AND’ allows for citations containing all search terms to be retrieved, OR’ can produce citations containing at least one of a group of search terms. Therefore, ‘OR’ was used here where words were similar/related e.g., IBD and Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Truncation as denoted by asterix (*) was used to find citations including words with the same stem e.g. mucin, mucins, mucinase.
Figure 2Citation network showing the output data of citation chaining process using key articles that were included for analysis following database searches and screening. Backwards citation chaining output data is presented on the left-hand side, here an arrow is pointed from the key articles used for citation chaining towards an article that the key article cites. Forwards citation chaining output data is presented on the righthand side, here an arrow is pointed towards the key article used for citation chaining from an article that has cited the key article. Dashed arrows are used to highlight articles that were identified by citation chaining.
Summary of the study design and sample characteristics for each of the included articles.
| Identification | Population | Methods Used | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First Author, Reference | Year | Country | Control Samples | Nature of Control Samples | Patient Samples | Diagnosis-Disease Severity/Scoring Indices | Study Design |
| Weiss, [ | 1996 | USA | 1 | Resected tissue from patient with colon diverticular disease | 8 | Method of Diagnosis/ Scoring Indices used are not stated | Case–control study |
| Tytgat, [ | 1996 | Netherlands | 7 | Negative history of IBD (colon appeared normal endoscopically and histologically) | Active UC: 6, Inactive UC (remission): 6 | Truelove and Richards Index | Case–control study |
| Hinoda, [ | 1998 | Japan | 14 | Normal colonic tissue obtained post-mortem (from autopsies) | 31 | Matts Score | Case–control study |
| Van Klinken, [ | 1999 | Netherlands | 12 | Tissue resected from patients diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome, hyperplastic polyps or diverticulosis but with negative history of IBD | Active UC: 13, Inactive UC (remission): 12 | Truelove and Richards | Case–control study |
| Hanski, [ | 1999 | Germany | 13 | Histologically normal mucosae samples | 70 | Matts Score (degree of inflammation), Remmele and Stegner (immunoreactive score for immunohistochemistry) | Case–control study |
| Shaoul, [ | 2004 | Japan | 5 | Samples taken from study groups histology library (original source of controls is not stated) | 5 | Method of Diagnosis/Scoring Indices used are not stated | Case–control study |
| Longman, [ | 2006 | UK | 17 | Tissue resected from patients undergoing elective colorectal resection surgery but with negative history of IBD | 40 | Truelove and Witts Criteria | Case–control study |
| Moehle, [ | 2006 | Germany | 14 | Tissue resected from patients following colonoscopy (8 with no tissue abnormalities; remaining samples from patients with diverticulitis, polyposis coli, lymphoid tissue-lymphoma, carcinoma, diverticulosis, eosinophilic colitis, infectious colitis | Active UC: 14, Inactive UC (remission): 5 | Diagnosis based on clinical features and radiologic/endoscopic findings | Case–control study |
| Gersemann, [ | 2009 | Germany | 21 | Tissue resected from patients undergoing routine colonoscopy (specific reasons for colonoscopy are not outlined) | Active UC: 25Inactive UC: 15 | Method of Diagnosis/Scoring Indices used are not stated | Case–control study |
| Furr, [ | 2010 | USA | 21 | Tissues randomly resected from patients undergoing colonic biopsy but with negative history of IBD | 14 | Diagnosis based on medical records | Case–control study |
| Senapati, [ | 2010 | USA | 12 | Patients undergoing colonoscopy whose colonoscopic exams/histology were normal | 25 | Diagnosis based on medical records | Case–control study |
| Larsson, [ | 2011 | Sweden | 25 | Tissue resected from patients during colonoscopy for polyp surveillance, investigation of anaemia or rectal bleeding (normal colonic mucosa, no signs of inflammation) | Active UC: 15, Inactive UC (remission): 13 | Sandborn’s histological activity score | Case–control study |
| Kini, [ | 2015 | India | 12 | Tissue resected from patients with IBS undergoing routine colonoscopy or during polyp surveillance colonoscopy | 22 | Truelove and Witts (clinical disease severity), Ulcerative Colitis Disease Activity Index (endoscopic severity) | Case–control study |
| Yamamoto-Furusho, [ | 2015 | México | 30 | Tissue resected from patients during colonoscopy for polyp surveillance/screening and evaluation for anaemia (normal colonic mucosa, no signs of inflammation) | Active UC: 20, Inactive UC (remission): 20 | Mayo score (clinical and endoscopic activity evaluation), Riley score (histological activity evaluation) | Case–control study |
| Alipour, [ | 2016 | Canada | 12 | Tissue resected from patients with Irritable bowel syndrome, benign polyps, chronic diarrhoea but negative history of IBD and no signs of inflammation | 10 | Paris Classification and Paediatric Ulcerative Colitis Activity Index (PUCAI) | Case–control study |
| van der Post, [ | 2019 | Sweden | 47 | Tissues resected from patients during colonoscopy; patients with polyps, diverticulosis but with negative history of IBD | Active UC: 36, Inactive UC (remission): 28 | Mayo score (clinical and endoscopic activity evaluation) and/or Sandborn’s histological activity score | Case–control study |
Summary of the purpose for articles included for analysis and key findings.
| First Author, Reference | Purpose of Study | MUC Gene Investigated | Measuring MUC Expression | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weiss, [ | To investigate effect of inflammation on expression of mucin genes at cellular level | MUC2, MUC3 | In-situ hybridisation with RNA probes | MUC2 and MUC3 expression in colonic mucosa is independent of inflammation |
| Tytgat, [ | To study regulation of MUC2 expression in patients with UC compared with controls | MUC2 | MUC2 precursor quantified by SDS-PAGE, total MUC2 by dot blot, in-situ hybridisation with RNA probes to quantify MUC2 mRNA | Inefficient translation of MUC2 mRNA may lead to the reduction in MUC2 synthesis observed in active UC |
| Hinoda, [ | To determine if MUC2 protein expression is altered in UC | MUC2 | MUC2 protein detected by Immunohistochemistry | Decreased MUC2 protein production and expression in active UC is associated with undifferentiated goblet cells |
| Van Klinken, [ | To determine whether there are alterations in MU2 sulphation and secretion in active UC | MUC2 | Analysis and quantification of total MUC2 using SDS-PAGE and dot blotting | Absolute amount of MUC2 secreted is decreased and mucins are under-sulphated in active UC |
| Hanski, [ | To study alterations in MUC2 expression in UC patient colonic tissue | MUC2 | MUC2 protein detected by immunohistochemistry and MUC2 mRNA detected using in-situ hybridisation | Increase in MUC2 protein detection in UC samples may be related to reduction in post transcriptional modification |
| Shaoul, [ | To investigate alterations in expression and distribution of MUC2, MUC5AC, trefoil factor 1 (TFF1) in UC | MUC2, MUC5AC | PAS/Alcian blue immunohistochemistry | Immature (poorly glycos-ylated) MUC2 is expressed in UC colonic mucosa depleted of goblet cells |
| Longman, [ | To investigate alterations in the expression of mucin genes and trefoil peptide genes in UC | MUC1-6 | Immunohistochemistry and in-situ hybridisation | MUC1 expression upregulation is associated with severe UC and there is a reduction of MUC2 expression in UC |
| Moehle, [ | To characterize changes in mucin expression and identify allelic variants of MUC genes in UC | MUC1-20 | Affymetrix DNA-microarray analysis and RT-PCR | MUC12 mRNA expression is downregulated in UC and is independent of inflammation |
| Gersemann, [ | To understand the mechanisms involved with goblet cell differentiation and mucin production in IBD | MUC1, MUC2, MUC4 | RT-PCR | Impairments in goblet cell differentiation factor induction in UC correlates with a reduction in mucin synthesis. |
| Furr, [ | To determine whether MUC1 expression is altered in IBD | MUC1 | Immunochemistry using anti-MUC1 anti-bodies | Overexpression and hypoglycosylation of MUC1 observed in a subset of UC patients |
| Senapati, [ | To determine the subcellular localization of MUC17 in colonic mucosa and to determine whether MUC17 expression is altered in IBD and neoplastic diseases. | MUC17 | Immunohistochemistry using anti-MUC17 polyclonal antibody | MUC17 expression is reduced in colonic mucosa of UC patients |
| Larsson, [ | To determine whether MUC2 glycosylation is related to degree of mucosal inflammation in UC | MUC2 | SDS-PAGE used to identify and quantify MUC2 | Alterations in MUC2 glycosylation are associated with inflammation |
| Kini, [ | To determine whether alterations occur in colonic stem cells during the pathogenesis of UC and to determine the impact of such changes on goblet cell development and proteins synthesized by goblet cells | MUC2 | H&E, Alcian blue and PAS immunohistochemistry staining to detect MUC2 protein | A reduction in MUC2 protein within the lower colonic crypt precedes inflammation. |
| Yamamoto-Furusho, [ | To determine if MUC12, MUC16, MUC20 expression changes in UC | MUC12, MUC16, MUC20 | MUC gene expression measured using RT-PCR and MUC protein expression measured using immunohistochemistry | MUC16, MUC20 expression increase in UC and increase in MUC20 was associated with remission of UC |
| Alipour, [ | To assess whether mucosal barrier defects are prerequisites to UC | MUC2 | Fluorescence in-situ hybridisation (FISH) and immunofluorescence | Reduction in mucin-containing goblet cells and mucin production in UC patients compared to controls |
| van der Post, [ | To investigate compositional alterations that occur at the adherent mucus layer in UC | MUC2 | Absolute quantification of MUC2 using Skyline (V.3.6.0.1) following mass spectrometry | Reduction of MUC2 in active UC associated with exhaustion of secretory response of goblet cells to microbes |
Periodic acid–Schiff/Alcian blue (PAS/Alcian blue), Haematoxylin and eosin (H&E), Sodium Dodecyl Sulphate-Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), Real Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR).
Figure 3Quality assessment of included studies (A) Scoring system used with categories and information outlining how scores were allocated. (B) List of included studies and scores allocated to each included study using the quality assessment scoring system is shown.
Figure 4Summary of information reported in articles analyzing differences in mucin expression in active UC compared to controls. (A) Bar chart and table showing observations made by included studies that investigated MUC2 mRNA expression in active UC, with controls as baseline for comparison. (B) Bar chart and table showing observations made by included studies that investigated MUC2 protein expression in active UC, with controls as baseline for comparison. (C) Table showing observations made by included studies that investigated mucin expression levels of mucins other than MUC2. Key: I-Increased expression in comparison to controls, U-Unaltered expression in comparison to controls, D-decreased expression in comparison to controls.
Figure 5Graphical summary describing the various and dynamic changes in mucin structure and the mucus layer in relation to Ulcerative Colitis (UC). (A) Schematic representations of the mucin MUC2 with domain features explained in Key A. In UC aberrant post translational modifications can lead to hypoglycosylation of MUC2. Hypoglycosylation results in the PTS region being exposed, therefore an unstable form of MUC2 is produced. Mucin glycans can also be under sulphated as a result of aberrant post translation modifications in patients with UC. These aberrations leading to conformational pressure of the MUC2 structure make MUC2 more susceptible to mucin degradation by pathogenic bacteria which are present in the colonic milieu during UC. (B) Schematic representation of the mucosal layer in healthy individuals and patients suffering from UC with features with explained in Key B. There are two sublayers of mucus, the outer layer and the inner layer, mucins are produced by goblet cells in the epithelia and most are expressed within the inner layer of colonic mucus as presented on the left-hand side. Mucins in the adherent layer of healthy individuals form interactions which aid to limit the contact between luminal contents and the epithelia. Mucin degradation and mucin synthesis are in equilibrium in healthy individuals. In UC studies have reported a decrease in the number of goblet cells and subsequently a decrease in mucin secretion as shown on the right-hand side of 5B. Studies have also reported an increase in the number of immature goblet cells (poorly differentiated) which leads to the production of unstable mucins (hypoglycosylated and/or under sulphated). The mucosal membrane also becomes perturbed resulting in the infiltration of the luminal microbiota into the inner mucus layer. Increased contact between epithelial cells and bacteria results in inflammation as shown.