Literature DB >> 9064318

Epithelial exposure to hypoxia modulates neutrophil transepithelial migration.

S P Colgan1, A L Dzus, C A Parkos.   

Abstract

Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) are central to the pathogenesis of a number of intestinal diseases. PMN-induced damage to the protective epithelium occurs in hemorrhagic shock, necrotizing enterocolitis and conditions resulting in intestinal reperfusion injury. In such diseases, tissue hypoxia has been implicated as a pathophysiologic mediator. Thus, we hypothesized that exposure of intestinal epithelia to hypoxia may modulate PMN-epithelial interactions. In this study, T84 cell monolayers, a human intestinal crypt cell line, and isolated human PMN were used to examine the influence of hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R) on PMN transepithelial migration. Confluent T84 cell monolayers were exposed to hypoxia (range 2-21% O2 for 0-72 h) and reoxygenated with buffer containing PMN. Transmigration of PMN (basolateral to apical orientation) was driven by a transepithelial gradient of the chemotactic peptide tMLP. In response to hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R), transmigration into, and across epithelial monolayer was increased in a dose- (EC50 approximately 7% O2) and time-dependent fashion (3.5 +/- 0.3-fold increase at 2% O2 for 48 h, P < 0.001). Such conditions of H/R were not toxic to epithelia and did not influence epithelial barrier function. The influence of H/R on PMN transmigration was protein synthesis-dependent (> 80% decreased in the presence of cycloheximide) and could be inhibited by addition of functionally inhibitory antibodies to the PMN beta 2 integrin CD11b/18 (> 80% attenuated) and to CD47 (> 90% decreased compared to control). Hypoxia induced epithelial production and basolateral release of the PMN activating chemokine interleukin-8 (IL-8, nearly sixfold increase over normoxic control) which remained avidly associated with the epithelial matrix. Treatment of epithelial cells with IL-8 antisense oligonucleotides resulted in decreased monolayer-associated PMN but did not influence PMN transmigration, suggesting that epithelial IL-8 production may serve as a recruitment signal for PMN to the basal surface of polarized epithelia. The present observations indicate that H/R provides a relevant stimulus for novel biochemical crosstalk between epithelia and PMN.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 9064318      PMCID: PMC2192799          DOI: 10.1084/jem.184.3.1003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Med        ISSN: 0022-1007            Impact factor:   14.307


  45 in total

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Review 5.  Endothelial nuclear factor-kappa B and the initiation of the atherosclerotic lesion.

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8.  Differential binding of chemokines to glycosaminoglycan subpopulations.

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Authors:  D Cooper; F P Lindberg; J R Gamble; E J Brown; M A Vadas
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  33 in total

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Review 3.  Therapeutic targets for hypoxia-elicited pathways.

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4.  Commensal Escherichia coli reduces epithelial apoptosis through IFN-alphaA-mediated induction of guanylate binding protein-1 in human and murine models of developing intestine.

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Review 6.  Hypoxia and Mucosal Inflammation.

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Review 7.  Intestinal hypoxia and hypoxia-induced signalling as therapeutic targets for IBD.

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10.  Carbon dioxide directly suppresses spontaneous migration, chemotaxis, and free radical production of human neutrophils.

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