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BVES is required for maintenance of colonic epithelial integrity in experimental colitis by modifying intestinal permeability.

Citation
Choksi, Y. A., et al. “Bves Is Required For Maintenance Of Colonic Epithelial Integrity In Experimental Colitis By Modifying Intestinal Permeability.”. Mucosal Immunology, pp. 1363-1374.
Center Vanderbilt University
Author Yash A Choksi, Vishruth K Reddy, Kshipra Singh, Caitlyn W Barrett, Sarah P Short, Bobak Parang, Cody E Keating, Joshua J Thompson, Thomas G Verriere, Rachel E Brown, Blanca Piazuelo, David M Bader, Kay Washington, Mukul K Mittal, Thomas Brand, Alain P Gobert, Lori A Coburn, Keith T Wilson, Christopher S Williams
Abstract

Blood vessel epicardial substance (BVES), or POPDC1, is a tight junction-associated transmembrane protein that modulates epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) via junctional signaling pathways. There have been no in vivo studies investigating the role of BVES in colitis. We hypothesized that BVES is critical for maintaining colonic epithelial integrity. At baseline, Bves mouse colons demonstrate increased crypt height, elevated proliferation, decreased apoptosis, altered intestinal lineage allocation, and dysregulation of tight junctions with functional deficits in permeability and altered intestinal immunity. Bves mice inoculated with Citrobacter rodentium had greater colonic injury, increased colonic and mesenteric lymph node bacterial colonization, and altered immune responses after infection. We propose that increased bacterial colonization and translocation result in amplified immune responses and worsened injury. Similarly, dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) treatment resulted in greater histologic injury in Bves mice. Two different human cell lines (Caco2 and HEK293Ts) co-cultured with enteropathogenic E. coli showed increased attaching/effacing lesions in the absence of BVES. Finally, BVES mRNA levels were reduced in human ulcerative colitis (UC) biopsy specimens. Collectively, these studies suggest that BVES plays a protective role both in ulcerative and infectious colitis and identify BVES as a critical protector of colonic mucosal integrity.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Mucosal immunology
Volume
11
Issue
5
Number of Pages
1363-1374
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1935-3456
DOI
10.1038/s41385-018-0043-2
Alternate Journal
Mucosal Immunol
PMID
29907869
PMCID
PMC6162166
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