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The Insect Peptide CopA3 Increases Colonic Epithelial Cell Proliferation and Mucosal Barrier Function to Prevent Inflammatory Responses in the Gut.

Authors :
Kim DH
Hwang JS
Lee IH
Nam ST
Hong J
Zhang P
Lu LF
Lee J
Seok H
Pothoulakis C
Lamont JT
Kim H
Source :
The Journal of biological chemistry [J Biol Chem] 2016 Feb 12; Vol. 291 (7), pp. 3209-23. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Dec 11.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The epithelial cells of the gut form a physical barrier against the luminal contents. The collapse of this barrier causes inflammation, and its therapeutic restoration can protect the gut against inflammation. EGF enhances mucosal barrier function and increases colonocyte proliferation, thereby ameliorating inflammatory responses in the gut. Based on our previous finding that the insect peptide CopA3 promotes neuronal growth, we herein tested whether CopA3 could increase the cell proliferation of colonocytes, enhance mucosal barrier function, and ameliorate gut inflammation. Our results revealed that CopA3 significantly increased epithelial cell proliferation in mouse colonic crypts and also enhanced colonic epithelial barrier function. Moreover, CopA3 treatment ameliorated Clostridium difficile toxin As-induced inflammation responses in the mouse small intestine (acute enteritis) and completely blocked inflammatory responses and subsequent lethality in the dextran sulfate sodium-induced mouse model of chronic colitis. The marked CopA3-induced increase of colonocyte proliferation was found to require rapid protein degradation of p21(Cip1/Waf1), and an in vitro ubiquitination assay revealed that CopA3 directly facilitated ubiquitin ligase activity against p21(Cip1/Waf1). Taken together, our findings indicate that the insect peptide CopA3 prevents gut inflammation by increasing epithelial cell proliferation and mucosal barrier function.<br /> (© 2016 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1083-351X
Volume :
291
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of biological chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26655716
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.682856