Disruption of Epithelial Barrier Integrity via Altered GILZ/c-Rel/RACK1 Signaling in Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

Erica Buoso, Mirco Masi, Roberta Valeria Limosani, Francesca Fagiani, Chiara Oliviero, Giorgia Colombo, Luigi Cari, Marco Gentili, Eleonora Lusenti, Lucrezia Rosati, Federica Pisati, Alessandra Pasini, Marco Vincenzo Lenti, Antonio Di Sabatino, Claire Louise Mobbs, Stefan Przyborski, Simona Ronchetti, Cristina Travelli, Marco Racchi
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Abstract

Background and aims: Given the role of Receptor for Activated C Kinase 1 (RACK1) in both immune cell activation and in the maintenance of the intestinal epithelial barrier integrity, we investigated whether it was involved in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).

Methods: RACK1 expression was analyzed in intestinal mucosal samples of healthy and IBD patients, in mice with chemically induced colitis, and in diseased in vitro 2D and 3D coculture models by luciferase assay, reverse transcription-quantitative PCR, Western blotting, immunofluorescence, and immunohistochemistry. Based on our finding that glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ or tsc22d3) positively correlates with RACK1 expression in IBD patients, GILZ knockout mice and cell silencing experiments were performed.

Results: RACK1 was significantly decreased in IBD, especially in ulcerative colitis. This was associated with an NF-κB/c-Rel-related mechanism, correlating with decreased GILZ protein expression. GILZ depletion confirmed a decrease in RACK1 expression, which favored SRC activation and led to a significant reduction in E-cadherin, resulting in impaired epithelial barrier integrity. Finally, our data highlighted that this novel mechanism could be considered to develop new therapies since dexamethasone, the first line of treatment in IBD, restored RACK1 expression through the glucocorticoid receptor in a c-Rel/GILZ-independent manner.

Conclusions: We provide the first evidence that an alteration of RACK1/SRC/E-cadherin regulatory mechanism, correlating with decreased GILZ protein expression, is involved in epithelial barrier disruption. The clinical relevance is based on the fact that this mechanism involving GILZ/c-Rel-related RACK1 expression could be considered to improve IBD therapies, particularly in patients with low or no response to glucocorticoid treatment.

炎症性肠病(IBD)中通过改变GILZ/c-Rel/RACK1信号破坏上皮屏障完整性
背景和目的:考虑到活化C激酶1受体(RACK1)在免疫细胞活化和维持肠上皮屏障完整性中的作用,我们研究了它是否参与炎症性肠病(IBD)。方法:采用荧光素酶法、RT-qPCR、Western blotting、免疫荧光和免疫组织化学方法,分析RACK1在体外2D和3D共培养模型中健康和IBD患者肠黏膜样本、化学诱导结肠炎小鼠和病变小鼠中的表达。基于我们发现糖皮质激素诱导的亮氨酸拉链(GILZ或tsc22d3)与IBD患者RACK1表达呈正相关,我们进行了GILZ敲除小鼠和细胞沉默实验。结果:RACK1在IBD中显著降低,尤其是溃疡性结肠炎。这与NF-κB/c- rel相关机制有关,与GILZ蛋白表达降低有关。GILZ缺失证实RACK1表达减少,这有利于SRC激活并导致E-cadherin显著减少,导致上皮屏障完整性受损。最后,我们的数据强调,由于地塞米松(IBD的一线治疗药物)以c-Rel/GILZ独立的方式通过糖皮质激素受体恢复RACK1表达,因此可以考虑开发新的治疗方法。结论:我们首次提供证据表明,RACK1/SRC/E-cadherin调控机制的改变与GILZ蛋白表达的降低有关,参与了上皮屏障的破坏。临床相关性是基于这样一个事实,即这种涉及GILZ/ crel相关RACK1表达的机制可以被认为改善IBD治疗,特别是在糖皮质激素治疗低反应或无反应的患者中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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