1. Elevated expression of Paneth cell CRS4C in ileitis-prone SAMP1/YitFc mice: regional distribution, subcellular localization, and mechanism of action
Michael T Shanahan, Alda Vidrich, Yoshinori Shirafuji, Claire L Dubois, Agnes Henschen-Edman, Susan J Hagen, Steven M Cohn, André J Ouellette J Biol Chem. 2010 Mar 5;285(10):7493-504. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M109.083220. Epub 2010 Jan 7.
Paneth cells at the base of small intestinal crypts of Lieberkühn secrete host defense peptides and proteins, including alpha-defensins, as mediators of innate immunity. Mouse Paneth cells also express alpha-defensin-related Defcr-rs genes that code for cysteine-rich sequence 4C (CRS4C) peptides that have a unique CPX triplet repeat motif. In ileitis-prone SAMP1/YitFc mice, Paneth cell levels of CRS4C mRNAs and peptides are induced more than a 1000-fold relative to non-prone strains as early as 4 weeks of age, with the mRNA and peptide levels highest in distal ileum and below detection in duodenum. CRS4C-1 peptides are found exclusively in Paneth cells where they occur only in dense core granules and thus are secreted to function in the intestinal lumen. CRS4C bactericidal peptide activity is membrane-disruptive in that it permeabilizes Escherichia coli and induces rapid microbial cell K(+) efflux, but in a manner different from mouse alpha-defensin cryptdin-4. In in vitro studies, inactive pro-CRS4C-1 is converted to bactericidal CRS4C-1 peptide by matrix metalloproteinase-7 (MMP-7) proteolysis of the precursor proregion at the same residue positions that MMP-7 activates mouse pro-alpha-defensins. The absence of processed CRS4C in protein extracts of MMP-7-null mouse ileum demonstrates the in vivo requirement for intracellular MMP-7 in pro-CRS4C processing.
2. Loss of epithelial RelA results in deregulated intestinal proliferative/apoptotic homeostasis and susceptibility to inflammation
Kris A Steinbrecher, Eleana Harmel-Laws, Raquel Sitcheran, Albert S Baldwin J Immunol. 2008 Feb 15;180(4):2588-99. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.180.4.2588.
NF-kappaB plays a central, proinflammatory role in chronic intestinal inflammation, yet recent work suggests a predominantly protective function for this transcription factor group in some cell types of the intestine. We herein describe the conditional deletion of the NF-kappaB RelA gene in murine intestinal epithelia and determine its function in homeostatic control of enterocyte proliferation/apoptosis and susceptibility to colonic inflammation. Mice lacking RelA in ileal and colonic enterocytes were born in expected Mendelian ratios, and RelA-null epithelia differentiated normally. Spontaneous intestinal disease and death occurred with low penetrance in neonates lacking epithelial RelA. IkappaBalpha and IkappaBbeta were significantly diminished in RelA-null epithelia, and endotoxin challenge revealed elevated p50 and c-Rel DNA binding activity as compared with controls. Deletion of RelA resulted in diminished expression of antimicrobial (defensin-related cryptdin 4, defensin-related cryptdin 5, RegIIIgamma) and antiapoptotic, prorestitution genes (Bcl-x(L), RegIV, IL-11, IL-18), and basal rates of epithelial apoptosis and proliferation were elevated. Mice lacking colonic RelA were sensitive to dextran sodium sulfate-induced colitis. Although experimental colitis enhanced proliferation in cells lacking RelA, sustained epithelial cell apoptosis precluded mucosal healing and decreased animal survival. We conclude that activation of RelA is required for homeostatic regulation of cell death and division in intestinal epithelia, as well as for protection from development of severe, acute inflammation of the intestine.
3. Cryptdin gene expression in developing mouse small intestine
D Darmoul, D Brown, M E Selsted, A J Ouellette Am J Physiol. 1997 Jan;272(1 Pt 1):G197-206. doi: 10.1152/ajpgi.1997.272.1.G197.
In rodents, the four intestinal epithelial cell lineages differentiate and become morphologically distinct during the first 2-3 postnatal wk. In studies reported here, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)-based assays detected Paneth cell defensin mRNAs in intestinal RNA from 1-day-old (P1) mice before crypt formation and maturation of the epithelium. Analysis of these defensin-coding RT-PCR products from P1 mice showed that 69% of clones sequenced coded for cryptdin-6, suggesting that it is the most abundant enteric defensin mRNA in the newborn. Paneth cell mRNAs, including cryptdins-4 and -5, lysozyme, matrilysin, and defensin-related sequences, also were detected in RNA from P1 mouse intestine. Unlike adult mice, where only Paneth cells are immunopositive for cryptdin, cryptdin-containing cells were distributed throughout the newborn intestinal epithelium and not in association with rudimentary crypts. Cryptdin immunoreactivity in the P1 mouse intestine was specific for intracellular granule contents, and immunofluorescent detection of cryptdins on mucosal surfaces suggested that the peptides are released into the intestinal lumen in P1 mice Defensin secretion may contribute to innate immunity of the neonatal intestine before the presence of distinguishable Paneth cells.