4.5 Article

Absence of ABCG2-mediated mucosal detoxification in patients with active inflammatory bowel disease is due to impeded protein folding

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 441, Issue -, Pages 87-93

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20111281

Keywords

breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP); Crohn's disease; endoplasmic reticulum stress; inflammatory bowel disease (IBD); ulcerative colitis; unfolded protein response

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Xenotoxic damage in inflammatory diseases, including IBD (inflammatory bowel disease), is compounded by reduced activity of the xenobiotic transporter ABCG2 (ATP-binding-cassette G2) during the inflammatory state. An association between the activation of the unfolded protein response pathway and inflammation prompted us to investigate the possibility that reduced ABCG2 activity is causally linked to this response. To this end, we correlated expression of ABCG2 and the unfolded protein response marker GRP78 (glucose-regulated protein of 78 kDa) in colon biopsies from healthy individuals (n = 9) and patients with inactive (n = 67) or active (n = 55) IBD, ischaemic colitis (n = 10) or infectious colitis (n = 14). In addition, tissue specimens throughout the small bowel from healthy individuals (n = 27) and from patients with inactive (n = 9) or active (n = 25) Crohn's disease were co-stained for ABCG2 and GRP78. In all biopsies from patients with active inflammation, irrespective of the underlying disease, an absolute negative correlation was observed between epithelial ABGG2 expression and GRP78 expression, suggesting that inflammation-dependent activation of the unfolded protein response is responsible for suppression of ABCG2 function. The link between the unfolded protein response and functional ABCG2 expression was further corroborated by live imaging of ABCG2-expressing cells, which showed that various inflammatory mediators, including nitric oxide, activate the unfolded protein response and concomitantly reduce plasma membrane localization as well as transport function of ABCG2. Thus a novel mechanism for explaining xenobiotic stress during inflammation emerges in which intestinal inflammation activates the unfolded protein response, in turn abrogating defences against xenobiotic challenge by impairing ABCG2 expression and function.

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