| Literature DB >> 34983695 |
Fumiaki Kojima1,2,3, Hiroki Sekiya4, Yuka Hioki5, Hitoshi Kashiwagi6, Makoto Kubo7,8, Masaki Nakamura7,9, Shotaro Maehana7,9, Yoshitaka Imamichi6, Koh-Ichi Yuhki6, Fumitaka Ushikubi6, Hidero Kitasato7,9, Takafumi Ichikawa4,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1 (mPGES-1) is a key enzyme that acts downstream of cyclooxygenase and plays a major role in inflammation by converting prostaglandin (PG) H2 to PGE2. The present study investigated the effect of genetic deletion of mPGES-1 on the development of immunologic responses to experimental colitis induced by dextran sodium sulfate (DSS), a well-established model of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).Entities:
Keywords: Colitis; Cyclooxygenase; Cytokine; Immunity; Inflammatory bowel disease; Prostaglandin E synthase; Prostaglandin E2; Th17 and Th1 response
Year: 2022 PMID: 34983695 PMCID: PMC8725565 DOI: 10.1186/s41232-021-00188-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inflamm Regen ISSN: 1880-8190
Primer sequences of various target genes for real-time PCR.
| Target gene | Sense primer | Antisense primer |
|---|---|---|
mPGES-1 COX-2 cPGES COX-1 EP1 EP2 EP3 EP4 Occludin Claudin-1 IL-17A IFNγ IL-2 TNFα IL-1β IL-6 TGFβ1 IL-23p19 IL-12/23p40 IL-12p35 IL-10 Bak Bid Bim Bad Noxa Bcl2 GAPDH | 5’-AGCACACTGCTGGTCATCAA-3’ 5’-AGGACTCTGCTCACGAAGGA-3’ 5’-TGTTTGCGAAAAGGAGAATCCG-3’ 5’-GCCAGAACCAGGGTGTCTGT-3’ 5’-TGCCTCATCCATCACTTC-3’ 5’-TATGCTCCTTGCCTTTCAC-3’ 5’-GCTGTCCGTCTGTTGGTC-3’ 5’-CATCTTACTCATCGCCACC-3’ 5'-AAGCAAGTTAAGGGATCTGC-3' 5'-CCCCATCAATGCCAGGTATG-3' 5’-CAGGGAGAGCTTCATCTGTGT-3’ 5’-CGGCACAGTCATTGAAAGCCTA-3’ 5’-CCTGAGCAGGATGGAGAATTACA-3’ 5’-TCCCCAAAGGGATGAGAAG-3’ 5’-ACTGTGAAATGCCACCTTTTG-3’ 5’-TCCAGTTGCCTTCTTGGGAC-3’ 5’-CTTCAATACGTCAGACATTCGGG-3’ 5’-CCAGCAGCTCTCTCGGAATC-3’ 5’-TGGGAGTACCCTGACTCCTG-3’ 5’-AGTTTGGCCAGGGTCATTCC-3’ 5’-GGTTGCCAAGCCTTATCGGA-3’ 5’-GATGATATTAACCGGCGCTACG-3’ 5’-TAGGCGATGAGATGGACCACAA-3’ 5’-GATCGGAGACGAGTTCAACGAA-3’ 5’-GACGGGCAGCCACCAACAGTCAT-3’ 5’-GTGGAGTGCACCGGACATAACT-3’ 5’-ACAACATCGCCCTGTGGATGAC-3’ 5’-GTCTTCACCACCATGGAGAAGG-3’ | 5’-CTCCACATCTGGGTCACTCC-3’ 5’-TGACATGGATTGGAACAGCA-3 5’-ACCCATGTGATCCATCATCTCA-3’ 5’-GTAGCCCGTGCGAGTACAATC-3’ 5’-ACCACCAACACCAGCAG-3’ 5’-GACAACAGAGGACTGAGCG-3’ 5’-CCTTCTCCTTTCCCATCTG-3’ 5’-ATGTAAATCCAGGGGTCCA-3’ 5'-CAGATTAGAGTCCAAAGTCA-3' 5'-CACCTCCCAGAAGGCAGAGG-3' 5’-GCTGAGCTTTGAGGGATGAT-3’ 5’-GTTGCTGATGGCCTGATTGTC-3’ 5’-TCCAGAACATGCCGCAGAG-3’ 5’-CACTTGGTGGTTTGCTACGA-3’ 5’-TGTTGATGTGCTGCTGCGAG-3’ 5’-GTGTAATTAAGCCTCCGACTTG-3’ 5’-GTAACGCCAGGAATTGTTGCTA-3’ 5’-CGGATCCTTTGCAAGCAGAA-3’ 5’-GGAACGCACCTTTCTGGTTA-3’ 5’-CAGGTTTCGGGACTGGCTAAGA-3’ 5’-ACCTGCTCCACTGCCTTGCT-3’ 5’-CAGCTGATGCCACTCTTAAATA-3’ 5’-GGAAGGCTGTCTTCACCTAGTC-3’ 5’-TTCTCCATACCAGACGGAAGAT-3’ 5’-AAGGGCTAAGCTCCTCCTCCAT-3’ 5’-TGAGCACACTCGTCCTTCAAGT-3’ 5’-CAGAGACAGCCAGGAGAAATCA-3’ 5’-TCATGGATGACCTTGGCCAG-3’ |
Fig. 1Clinical course of DSS-induced colitis in mice with a mPGES-1 genetic deletion. A Time course of change in body weight, stool consistency, bleeding score, and total disease activity index (DAI) score of WT and mPGES-1−/− mice after indicated days of exposure to 1% DSS (n = 17). B On day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS, the length and weight of the colon were measured as an indirect marker of inflammation (n = 3 to 17). Pictures of the colon are representative examples in WT and mPGES-1−/− mice. *P < 0.05; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test
Fig. 2Histological analysis of DSS-induced colitis in mPGES-1−/− mice. A Colons of mPGES-1 WT and mPGES-1−/− mice were collected on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS, and sections were stained with H&E. Results are representative examples adapted with the Swiss roll technique in WT and mPGES-1−/− mice (n = 5 to 17). Scale bar, 100 μm. B Histological scores in WT and mPGES-1−/− mice (n = 5 to 17). Colon sections were examined by a blinded researcher, who calculated the epithelial damage score and inflammatory infiltration score and summed the 2 scores (maximum score: 8). C Intestinal permeability was assessed with FITC-dextran on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS (n = 9 to 17). *P < 0.05; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test. D Expression of mRNA for the tight junction molecules occludin and claudin-1 in colon from mice treated or not treated with 1% DSS for 7 days were analyzed by real-time RT-PCR. Levels of mRNA expression are shown as the fold induction relative to the expression in WT mice without DSS administration (assigned the value “1”). *P < 0.05; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test (n = 7 to 10)
Fig. 3Analysis of splenomegaly and anemia in mPGES-1−/− mice. A Spleen was isolated, imaged and weighed on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS. B Also on day 7, morphological analysis of the spleen was performed by H&E staining. Representative images are shown. Scale bar, 500 μm. C Erythrocyte count, hemoglobin (HGB) concentration, and hematocrit (HCT) in the peripheral blood were measured on day 7 after the start exposure to 1% DSS. *P < 0.05; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test (n = 3 to 17)
Fig. 4Expressions of mRNA for PGE2 biosynthetic enzymes and EP receptor subtypes in colon after exposure to DSS. A Expression of mRNA for PGES and COX isozymes in colon from mice treated or not treated with the indicated dose of DSS for 7 days were analyzed by real-time RT-PCR (n = 7 to 12). Levels of mRNA expression are shown as the fold induction relative to the expression in WT mice without DSS administration (assigned the value “1”). *P < 0.05 vs WT mice within each day, †P < 0.05 vs non-DSS-treated WT mice, and ‡P < 0.05 vs non-DSS-treated KO mice; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test. B Expression of EP receptor mRNA in colon from mice treated with 1% DSS for indicated days was analyzed by real-time RT-PCR (n = 7 to 10). Levels of mRNA expression are shown as the fold induction relative to day 0 expression in WT (assigned the value “1”). *P < 0.05 vs WT mice within each day, †P < 0.05 vs WT at day 0, and ‡P < 0.05 vs KO mice at day 0; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test
Fig. 5mPGES-1 protein expression and prostanoid production in the colon with colitis by DSS. A Expression of protein for PGES and COX isozymes in colon on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS were analyzed by western blot analysis (n = 3). B The levels of PGE2 and PGD2 in the colon from mice treated or not treated with the indicated dose of DSS for 7 days were measured by ELISA. *P < 0.05 vs WT mice within each day, †P < 0.05 vs non-DSS-treated WT mice, and ‡P < 0.05 vs non-DSS-treated KO mice; 2-way ANOVA followed by Turkey multiple comparison test (n = 3 to 5). C Representative double immunofluorescence staining image of Swiss-roll colon sections of WT mice on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS. Double staining for mPGES-1 (green) and E-cadherin, CD3 or CD11b (red) showed mPGES-1 immunoreactivity mostly colocalized with an epithelial cell marker, E-cadherin, a T cell marker CD3 and a monocytes/macrophage marker CD11b in the colon
Fig. 6Colonic expression profile of Th17/Th1-related cytokines in mPGES-1−/− mice with DSS-induced colitis. Expressions of mRNA for IL-17A, IFNγ, IL-2, TNFα, IL-1β, IL-6, TGFβ1, IL-23p19, IL-12/23p40, and IL-12p35 in colon from mice treated with 1% DSS for indicated days were analyzed by real-time RT-PCR (n = 7 to 10). Levels of mRNA expression are shown as the fold induction relative to day 0 expression in WT mice (assigned the value “1”). *P < 0.05 vs WT mice within each day, †P < 0.05 vs non-DSS-treated WT mice, and ‡P < 0.05 vs non-DSS-treated KO mice; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test
Fig. 7Generation of IL-17A- and IFNγ-producing T cells in colonic LPMCs and splenocytes of mPGES-1−/− mice with DSS-induced colitis. A Representative FCM plot of IL-17A-producing Th17 cells and IFNγ-producing Th1 cells in CD3+CD4+ T cells of splenocytes and colonic LPMCs isolated from WT and mPGES-1−/− mice with colitis. Colonic LPMCs were pooled from 4 mice in each experiment on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS and analyzed by FCM, as described in the Methods (n = 5). B The ratio and the number of IL-17A+ and IFNγ+ cells in CD3+CD4+ T cells of colonic LPMCs on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS (n = 5). *P < 0.05 vs WT; t test
Fig. 8Effect of mPGES-1 gene deletion on the generation of Tregs in DSS-induced colitis. A Representative FCM plot of FoxP3+CD25+ Tregs in CD3+CD4+ T cells of colonic LPMCs, isolated from WT and mPGES-1−/− mice with colitis. Colonic LPMCs were pooled from 4 mice in each experiment on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS and subjected to FCM analysis, as described in the Methods (n = 5). B The ratio and the number of FoxP3+CD25+ cells in CD3+CD4+ T cells of colonic LPMCs on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS (n = 5). C Expression of mRNA for IL-10 in the colon from mice treated or not treated with the indicated dose of DSS for 7 days was analyzed by real-time RT-PCR. Levels of mRNA expression are shown as the fold induction relative to the expression in WT without DSS administration (assigned the value “1”). *P < 0.05 vs WT within each day, †P < 0.05 vs non-DSS-treated WT mice, and ‡P < 0.05 vs non-DSS-treated KO mice; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test (n = 7 to 12)
Fig. 9Effect of CD4 positive T cell depletion on the exacerbated DSS-induced colitis in mPGES-1−/− mice. A Schematic representation of the experimental plan. B The efficacy of in vivo CD4+ T cell depletion was confirmed by flow cytometry analysis of T cell population in the peripheral blood and spleen (n = 9 to 11). C Time course of change in total disease activity index (DAI) score of WT and mPGES-1−/− mice after indicated days of exposure to 1% DSS (n = 9 to 11). On day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS, the length of the colon (D) and weight of the spleen (E) were measured as indirect markers of inflammation (n = 9 to 11). F Expressions of mRNA for IL-17A, IFNγ, IL-10, IL-1β, IL-6, and TNFα in colon from mice treated with 1% DSS for 7 days were analyzed by real-time RT-PCR (n = 9 to 11). Levels of mRNA expression are shown as the fold induction relative to the expression in WT mice without DSS administration (assigned the value “1”). *P < 0.05; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test
Fig. 10Analysis of apoptosis in mPGES-1−/− colons. A Representative images of Swiss-roll colon sections on day 7 after the start of exposure to 1% DSS. Arrows indicate apoptotic cells. Scale bar, 50 μm. B Quantification of apoptotic cells in colon (n = 5). C mRNA expressions of an anti-apoptotic factor Bcl2 and apoptotic markers, Bak, Bid, Bim, Bad, and Noxa, in colon from mice treated with 1% DSS for 7 days were analyzed by real-time RT-PCR (n = 7 to 10). Levels of mRNA expression are shown as the fold induction relative to the expression in WT mice without DSS administration (assigned the value “1”). *P < 0.05; 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey multiple comparison test