Toll-Interacting Protein Deficiency Leads to Increased Susceptibility to Acute and Chronic Colitis.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_C7A254085C05
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Toll-Interacting Protein Deficiency Leads to Increased Susceptibility to Acute and Chronic Colitis.
Title of the conference
Annual Meeting of the Swiss Society of Gastroenterology, Swiss Society for Visceral, Surgery Swiss Association for the Study of the Liver, Swiss Association of Clinical Nutrition
Author(s)
Maillard M., Bernasconil E., Holm U., Python C., Bachmann D., Bouzourene H., Burns K., Micheal P., Velinl D.
Address
Interlaken, Switzerland, September 23-24, 2010
ISBN
1424-7860
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2010
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
140
Series
Swiss Medical Weekly
Pages
7S
Language
english
Notes
Meeting Abstract
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sensing of bacterial products via Toll-like receptors is critical to maintain gut immune homeostasis. The Toll-Interacting Protein (Tollip) inhibits downstream signaling through the IL-1 receptor, TLR-2 and TLR-4. Here,we aimed to address the role of Tollip in acute and chronic inflammatory responses in the gut.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: WT or Tollip-deficient mice were exposed to dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) 1.5% in the drinking water during 7 days. To generate bone-marrow chimeras, WT or Tollip deficient mice were 900-rads irradiated, transplanted with WT or Tollip deficient bone-marrow cells and challenged with DSS 2-3 months after transplantation. IL-10 deficient mice were bred with Tollip deficient mice and colitis was compared at various time points.
RESULTS: Upon DSS exposure, Tollip-deficient mice had increased body weight loss and increased pro-inflammatory cytokine expression compared to WT controls. Challenge of bone-marrow chimeras showed that colitis susceptibility was also increased when Tollip deficiency was restricted to non-hematopoietic cells. DSS-exposure lead to a disorganized distribution of zona-occludens-1, a tight junction marker and increased number of apoptotic, cleaved caspase 3 positive, epithelial cells in Tollip-deficient compared to WT mice. Chronic colitis was also affected by Tollip deficiency as Tollip/IL-10 deficient mice had more severe histological stigmata of colitis and higher IL-17 expression than IL-10 deficient controls.
CONCLUSION: Tollip in non-hematopoietic cells is critical for adequate response to a chemical-induced stress in the gut and to hamper chronic bacteria-driven colitis. Modulation of epithelial cell integrity via Tollip likely contributes to the observed defects.
Web of science
Create date
04/11/2010 16:04
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:42
Usage data