Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5938987 | The American Journal of Pathology | 2011 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Although the cellular prion protein (PrPC) is expressed in the enteric nervous system and lamina propria, its function(s) in the gut is unknown. Because PrPC may exert a cytoprotective effect in response to various physiologic stressors, we hypothesized that PrPC expression levels might modulate the severity of experimental colitis. We evaluated the course of dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)-induced colitis in hemizygous Tga20 transgenic mice (approximately sevenfold overexpression of PrPC), Prnpâ/â mice, and wild-type mice. On day 7, colon length, disease severity, and histologic activity indices were determined. Unlike DSS-treated wild-type and Prnpâ/â animals, PrPC overexpressing mice were resistant to colitis induction, exhibited much milder histopathologic features, and did not exhibit weight loss or colonic shortening. In keeping with these results, pro-survival molecule expression and/or phosphorylation levels were elevated in DSS-treated Tga20 mice, whereas pro-inflammatory cytokine production and pSTAT3 levels were reduced. In contrast, DSS-treated Prnpâ/â mice exhibited increased BAD protein expression and a cytokine expression profile predicted to favor inflammation and differentiation. PrPC expression from both the endogenous Prnp locus or the Tga20 transgene was increased in the colons of DSS-treated mice. Considered together, these findings demonstrate that PrPC has a previously unrecognized cytoprotective and/or anti-inflammatory function within the murine colon.
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Authors
Gary R. Martin, Catherine M. Keenan, Keith A. Sharkey, Frank R. Jirik,