Inhibition of matriptase activity results in decreased intestinal epithelial monolayer integrity in vitro

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Abstract

Barrier dysfunction in inflammatory bowel diseases implies enhanced paracellular flux and lowered transepithelial electrical resistance (TER) causing effective invasion of enteropathogens or altered intestinal absorption of toxins and drug compounds. To elucidate the role of matriptase-driven cell surface proteolysis in the maintenance of intestinal barrier function, the 3-amidinophenylalanine-derived matriptase inhibitor, MI-432 was used on porcine IPEC-J2 cell monolayer. Studies with two fluorescent probes revealed that short (2 h) treatment with MI-432 caused an altered distribution of oxidative species between intracellular and extracellular spaces in IPEC-J2 cells. This perturbation was partially compensated when administration of inhibitor continued for up to 48 h. Significant decrease in TER between apical and basolateral compartments of MI-432-treated IPEC-J2 cell monolayers proved that matriptase is one of the key effectors in the maintenance of barrier integrity. Changes in staining pattern of matriptase and in localization of the junctional protein occludin were observed suggesting that inhibition of matriptase by MI-432 can also exert an effect on paracellular gate opening via modulation of tight junctional protein assembly. This study confirms that non-tumorigenic IPEC-J2 cells can be used as an appropriate small intestinal model for the in vitro characterization of matriptase-related effects on intestinal epithelium. These findings demonstrate indirectly that matriptase plays a pivotal role in the development of barrier integrity; thus matriptase dysfunction can facilitate the occurence of leaky gut syndrome observed in intestinal inflammatory diseases.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Relative TER (actual TER values divided by initial TERs) of both the control and the inhibited cell cultures (at 10, 25 and 50 μM of inhibitor MI-432). At 2 hours (*p < 0.05) and 24 hours (**p < 0.01) significant decreases in TER can be seen only with the 50 μM concentration while at 48 hours, for all concentrations of MI-432 (***p < 0.001) there are significant decreases in the TERs when compared to control cells.
  • Fig 3. Immunofluorescent staining of occludin (in red) in control and in inhibitor MI-432-treated IPEC-J2 cells after different treatment times. The cells were not completely differentiated when the inhibitor administration (50 μM) was started. Occludin can be seen in red and cell nuclei were stained with DAPI in blue. MI-432-induced matriptase suppression resulted in occludin loss in TJ strands. White arrows indicate the characteristic membranous pattern of occludin presence in the control panel.
  • Fig 4. Immunofluorescent staining of claudin-4 in control and MI-432-treated IPEC-J2 cells grown on Transwell polyester membrane insert. Cell monolayers were incubated with plain DMEM (control) or MI-432 (treated) for 48 hours, and then cells were labelled for claudin-4 and cell nuclei were stained with DAPI in blue. IPEC-J2 cells showed homogenous, intense membranous claudin-4 positivity in the absence and in the presence of MI-432.
  • Fig 5. Immunostaining of matriptase expression in IPEC-J2 cells cultured on polyester membrane inserts treated with inhibitor MI-432 for 48 hours.Cell nuclei are stained blue (DAPI), cell membranes are labelled with wheat germ agglutinin (Alexa 488, green). In control samples matriptase (Alexa 564 red) is colocalized with wheat germ agglutinin. 48 h long treatment of MI-432 at higher concentrations (at 25 and 50 μM) induced significant fluorescent signal loss of matriptase. Matriptase occurence was mainly observed around synthesis sites in MI-432-treated IPEC-J2 cells. 600 × magnification.
  • Fig 6. Summary of in vitro and ex vivo findings [31] after externally induced changes in matriptase-activities in the maintenance of intestinal epithelial integrity. TER stands for transepithelial electrical resistance, ST-14 means suppression of tumorigenicity-14.–indicates inhibition and + is for activation of matriptase-involved proteolytic pathways. Recent findings confirm that physiological barrier function of intestinal epithelium including transepithelial electrical resistance and paracellular efflux regulated by TJ protein assembly requires matriptase activity.

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APA

Pászti-Gere, E., McManus, S., Meggyesházi, N., Balla, P., Gálfi, P., & Steinmetzer, T. (2015). Inhibition of matriptase activity results in decreased intestinal epithelial monolayer integrity in vitro. PLoS ONE, 10(10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141077

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