Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5936291 | The American Journal of Pathology | 2011 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Intestinal fibrosis is a serious complication of Crohn's disease (CD) that can lead to stricture formation, which requires surgery. Mechanisms underlying intestinal fibrosis remain elusive because of a lack of suitable mouse models. Herein, we describe a spontaneous mouse model of intestinal inflammation with fibrosis and the profibrotic role of arginase I. The Src homology 2 domain-containing inositol polyphosphate 5â²-phosphatase-deficient (SHIP-/-) mice developed spontaneous discontinuous intestinal inflammation restricted to the distal ileum starting at the age of 4 weeks. Mice developed several key features resembling CD, including inflammation and fibrosis. Inflammation was characterized by abundant infiltrating Gr-1-positive immune cells, granuloma-like immune cell aggregates that contained multinucleated giant cells, and a mixed type 2 and type 17 helper T-cell cytokine profile. Fibrosis was characterized by a thickened ileal muscle layer, collagen deposition, and increased fibroblasts at the sites of collagen deposition. SHIP-/- ilea had increased arginase activity and arginase I expression that was inversely proportional to nitrotyrosine staining. SHIP-/- mice were treated with the arginase inhibitor S-(2-boronoethyl)-l-cysteine, and changes in the disease phenotype were measured. Arginase inhibition did not affect the number of immune cell infiltrates in the SHIP-/- mouse ilea; rather, it reduced collagen deposition and muscle hyperplasia. These findings suggest that arginase activity is a potential target to limit intestinal fibrosis in patients with CD.
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Authors
Keith W. McLarren, Alexandra E. Cole, Shelley B. Weisser, Nicole S. Voglmaier, Victoria S. Conlin, Kevan Jacobson, Oana Popescu, Jean-Luc Boucher, Laura M. Sly,