miR-146a regulates the crosstalk between intestinal epithelial cells, microbial components and inflammatory stimuli
Metadatos
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Anzola Santander, Andrea; González Pérez, Raquel; Gámez Belmonte, María de los Reyes; Ocón, Borja; Aranda, Carlos J.; Martínez-Moya Bernal, Patricia; López-Posadas, Rocío; Hernández Chirlaque, Cristina; Sánchez De Medina López-Huertas, Fermín; Martínez Augustín, María OlgaEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2018-11-16Referencia bibliográfica
Anzola, A., González, R., Gámez-Belmonte, R. et al. miR-146a regulates the crosstalk between intestinal epithelial cells, microbial components and inflammatory stimuli. Sci Rep 8, 17350 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-35338-y
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad and the Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional FEDER (SAF2008-01432, AGL2008-4332, SAF2011-22922, SAF2011- 22812, BFU2014-57736-P, AGL2014-58883-R, AGL2017-85270-R, SAF2017-88457-R); Junta de Andalucía (CTS164, CTS235 and CTS6736); University of Granada; Ministery of Education; CIBERehd, which is funded by Instituto de Salud Carlos III; Amino Up Chemical; Biosearch; Bioiberica; APC Europe; Sanofi; Hospira; Pzifer; HojiblancaResumen
Regulation of miR-146a abundance and its role in intestinal inflammation and particularly in intestinal
epithelial cells (IECs) has been poorly studied. Here we study the relationship between bacterial
antigens and inflammatory stimuli, and miR-146a expression using IEC lines and models of colitis
(trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS), dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) and the CD4 + CD62L + T cell
transfer model). Specific bacterial antigens and cytokines (LPS, flagelin and IL-1β/TNF) stimulate miR-
146a expression, while peptidoglycan, muramyldipeptide and CpG DNA have no effect. Overexpression
of miR-146a by LPS depends on the activation of the TLR4/MyD88/NF-kB and Akt pathways.
Accordingly, the induction of miR-146a is lower in TLR4, but not in TLR2 knock out mice in both basal
and colitic conditions. miR-146a overexpression in IECs induces immune tolerance, inhibiting cytokine
production (MCP-1 and GROα/IL-8) in response to LPS (IEC18) or IL-1β (Caco-2). Intestinal inflammation
induced by chemical damage to the epithelium (DSS and TNBS models) induces miR-146a, but no
effect is observed in the lymphocyte transfer model. Finally, we found that miR-146a expression is
upregulated in purified IECs from villi vs. crypts. Our results indicate that miR-146a is a key molecule in
the interaction among IECs, inflammatory stimuli and the microbiota.