4.5 Article

Altered distribution of tight junction proteins after intestinal ischaemia/reperfusion injury in rats

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 13, Issue 9B, Pages 4061-4076

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2009.00975.x

Keywords

ischaemia; reperfusion injury; permeability; tight junction; claudins; intestinal barrier function

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program in China [2007CB513005, 2009CB522405]
  2. Key project of National Natural Science Foundation in China [30830098]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation in China [30672061]
  4. Key project of Nanjing Military Command [06Z40]
  5. Military Scientific Research Fund [0603AM117]

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Tight junction (TJ) disruptions have been demonstrated both in vitro and more recently in vivo in infection. However, the molecular basis for changes of TJ during ischaemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury is poorly understood. In the present study, intestinal damage was induced by I/R in an animal model. As assessed by TUNEL and propidium iodide uptake, we showed that I/R injury induced apoptosis as well as necrosis in rat colon, and the frequency of apoptotic and necrotic cells reached the maximum at 5 hrs of reperfusion. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that claudins 1, 3 and 5 are strongly expressed in the surface epithelial cells of the colon; however, labelling of all three proteins was present diffusely within cells and no longer focused at the lateral cell boundaries after I/R. Using Western blot analysis, we found that distribution of TJ proteins in membrane microdomains of TJ was markedly affected in I/R injury rats. Occludin, ZO-1, claudin-1 and claudin-3 were completely displaced from TX-100 insoluble fractions to TX-100 soluble fractions, and claudin-5 was partly displaced. The distribution of lipid raft marker protein caveolin-1 was also changed after I/R. I/R injury results in the disruption of TJs, which characterized by relocalization of the claudins 1, 3 and 5 and an increase in intestinal permeability using molecular tracer measurement. I/R injury altered distribution of TJ proteins in vivo that was associated with functional TJ deficiencies.

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