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Occludin OCEL-domain interactions are required for maintenance and regulation of the tight junction barrier to macromolecular flux

Authors :
Kenneth Anderson
Jerrold R. Turner
David R. Raleigh
Amulya Lingaraju
Mary M. Buschmann
Erin M. McAuley
Juanmin Zha
Le Shen
Lydia A. Breskin
Yingmin Wang
Harsha E. Rajapakse
Elliot Abbott
Licheng Wu
Christopher R. Weber
Yitang Wang
Margolis, Benjamin
Source :
Molecular biology of the cell, vol 24, iss 19, Molecular Biology of the Cell
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2013.

Abstract

Occludin loss enhances paracellular macromolecular permeability (radius up to ∼62.5 Å) and is necessary for TNF-induced barrier loss. The latter requires the C-terminal OCEL domain, which stabilizes tight junction–associated occludin and regulates trafficking. Thus OCEL-mediated interactions are critical regulators of macromolecular paracellular flux.<br />In vitro and in vivo studies implicate occludin in the regulation of paracellular macromolecular flux at steady state and in response to tumor necrosis factor (TNF). To define the roles of occludin in these processes, we established intestinal epithelia with stable occludin knockdown. Knockdown monolayers had markedly enhanced tight junction permeability to large molecules that could be modeled by size-selective channels with radii of ∼62.5 Å. TNF increased paracellular flux of large molecules in occludin-sufficient, but not occludin-deficient, monolayers. Complementation using full-length or C-terminal coiled-coil occludin/ELL domain (OCEL)–deficient enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)–occludin showed that TNF-induced occludin endocytosis and barrier regulation both required the OCEL domain. Either TNF treatment or OCEL deletion accelerated EGFP-occludin fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, but TNF treatment did not affect behavior of EGFP-occludinΔOCEL. Further, the free OCEL domain prevented TNF-induced acceleration of occludin fluorescence recovery, occludin endocytosis, and barrier loss. OCEL mutated within a recently proposed ZO-1–binding domain (K433) could not inhibit TNF effects, but OCEL mutated within the ZO-1 SH3-GuK–binding region (K485/K488) remained functional. We conclude that OCEL-mediated occludin interactions are essential for limiting paracellular macromolecular flux. Moreover, our data implicate interactions mediated by the OCEL K433 region as an effector of TNF-induced barrier regulation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular biology of the cell, vol 24, iss 19, Molecular Biology of the Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7621ee2270237db68755507d1d699a83