4.6 Article

Autophagy Reduces the Degradation and Promotes Membrane Localization of Occludin to Enhance the Intestinal Epithelial Tight Junction Barrier against Paracellular Macromolecule Flux

Journal

JOURNAL OF CROHNS & COLITIS
Volume 17, Issue 3, Pages 433-449

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjac148

Keywords

Autophagy; occludin; inflammatory bowel disease; intestinal permeability; tight junction

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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is associated with the loss of the protein occludin, which forms the epithelial barrier. Autophagy, a cell-survival mechanism, can upregulate occludin levels and enhance the tight junction barrier, protecting against barrier loss and inflammation-induced damage.
Inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] is associated with loss of the epithelial barrier-forming protein occludin. We show that autophagy, a degradative cell-survival mechanism, upregulates cellular occludin and enhances the epithelial tight junction [TJ] barrier against macromolecular flux and inflammation-induced barrier loss. Background and Aims Functional loss of the gut epithelium's paracellular tight junction [TJ] barrier and defective autophagy are factors potentiating inflammatory bowel disease [IBD]. Previously, we showed the role of autophagy in enhancing the intestinal TJ barrier via pore-forming claudin-2 degradation. How autophagy regulates the TJ barrier-forming proteins remains unknown. Here, we investigated the role of autophagy in the regulation of occludin, a principal TJ component involved in TJ barrier enhancement. Results Autophagy induction using pharmacological activators and nutrient starvation increased total occludin levels in intestinal epithelial cells, mouse colonocytes and human colonoids. Autophagy induction enriched membrane occludin levels and reduced paracellular permeability of macromolecules. Autophagy-mediated TJ barrier enhancement was contingent on the presence of occludin as OCLN-/- nullified its TJ barrier-enhancing effect against macromolecular flux. Autophagy inhibited the constitutive degradation of occludin by preventing its caveolar endocytosis from the membrane and protected against inflammation-induced TJ barrier loss. Autophagy enhanced the phosphorylation of ERK-1/2 and inhibition of these kinases in Caco-2 cells and human colonic mucosa prevented the macromolecular barrier-enhancing effects of autophagy. In vivo, autophagy induction by rapamycin enhanced occludin levels in wild-type mouse intestines and protected against lipopolysaccharide- and tumour necrosis factor-alpha-induced TJ barrier loss. Disruption of autophagy with acute Atg7 knockout in adult mice decreased intestinal occludin levels, increasing baseline colonic TJ permeability and exacerbating the effect of experimental colitis. Conclusion Our data suggest a novel role of autophagy in promoting the intestinal TJ barrier by increasing occludin levels in an ERK1/2 mitogen-activated protein kinase-dependent mechanism.

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