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M313620200v1
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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print March 30, 2004
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M313620200
Submitted on December 12, 2003
Revised on March 30, 2004
Accepted on March 29, 2004

Endotoxin inhibits Intestinal epithelial restitution through activation of Rho-GTPase and increased focal adhesions

Selma Cetin, Henri R. Ford, Laura R. Sysko, Charu Agarwal, James Wang, Matthew D. Neal, Catherine Baty, Gerard Apodaca, and David J. Hackam

Pediatric Surgery, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15213

Corresponding Author: david.hackam{at}chp.edu

Diseases of gut inflammation such as neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) result after an injury to the mucosal lining of the intestine, leading to translocation of bacteria and endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS). Intestinal mucosal defects are repaired by the process of intestinal restitution, during which enterocytes migrate from healthy areas to sites of injury. In an animal model of NEC, we determined that intestinal restitution was significantly impaired compared to control animals. We therefore sought to determine the mechanisms governing enterocyte migration under basal conditions and after an endotoxin challenge. Here we show that the cytoskeletal reorganization and stress fiber formation required for migration in IEC-6 enterocytes requires RhoA. Enterocytes were found to express the endotoxin receptor toll like receptor 4 (TLR4), which served to bind and internalize lipopolysaccharide. Strikingly, endotoxin treatment significantly inhibited intestinal restitution, as measured by impaired IEC-6 cell migration across a scraped wound. LPS was found to increase RhoA activity in a PI3K-dependent manner, leading to an increase in phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase and an enhanced number of focal adhesions. Importantly, endotoxin caused a progressive, RhoA-dependent increase in cell-matrix tension/contractility which correlated with the observed impairment in enterocyte migration. We therefore conclude that endotoxin inhibits enterocyte migration through a RhoA-dependent increase in focal adhesions and enhanced cell adhesiveness, which may participate in the impaired restitution observed in experimental NEC.


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