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Copyright © 2007 by the American Physiological Society.
Leptin modulates the expression of secreted and membrane-associated mucins in colonic epithelial cells by targeting PKC, PI3K, and MAPK pathwaysMahmoud El Homsi,1 Robert Ducroc,3 Jean Claustre,1 Gérard Jourdan,1 Arieh Gertler,4 Monique Estienne,1,2 André Bado,3 Jean-Yves Scoazec,1 , and Pascale Plaisancié1,2 1INSERM, UMR865, IFR62, Faculté R. Laennec, Université Claude Bernard-Lyon 1, Lyon; 2INRA, UMR Neuro-Gastroentérologie et Nutrition, Toulouse; 3INSERM, U773, CRB3 EQ2, Faculté de Médecine X. Bichat, Paris, France; and 4Institute of Biochemistry, Food Science, and Nutrition, Faculty of Agricultural, Food and Environmental, Jerusalem, Israel Received for publication 20 February 2007. Accepted for publication 7 May 2007.
Abstract: Mucins play an essential role in the protection and repair of gastrointestinal mucosa. We recently showed that luminal leptin strongly stimulated mucin secretion in vivo in rat colon. In the present study, we challenged the hypothesis that leptin may act directly on goblet cells to induce mucin expression in rat and human intestinal mucin-producing cells (DHE and HT29-MTX). The endoluminal effect of leptin was also studied in vivo in rat perfused colon model. The presence of leptin receptors was demonstrated in the two cell lines by Western blot and RT-PCR. In rat DHE cells, leptin (0.0110 nmol/l, 60 min) dose dependently increased the secretion of mucins (210 ± 3% of controls) and the expression of Muc2, Muc3, and Muc4 (twofold basal level) but not of Muc1 and Muc5AC. Luminal perfusion of leptin (60 min, 0.1100 nmol/l) in rat colon also increased the mRNA level of Muc2, Muc3, and Muc4 but not of Muc1. In human HT29-MTX cells, leptin (0.0110 nmol/l, 60 min) dose dependently enhanced MUC2, MUC5AC, and MUC4 mRNA levels. These effects were prevented by pretreatment of cells with the leptin mutein L39A/D40A/F41A, which acts as a receptor antagonist. Finally, pathway inhibition experiments suggest that leptin increased mucin expression by activating PKC-, phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase-, and MAPK-dependent pathways but not the JAK/STAT pathway. In conclusion, leptin may contribute significantly to membrane-associated and secreted mucin production via a direct stimulation of colonic epithelial cells and the activation of leptin receptors. These data are consistent with a role for leptin in regulation of the intestinal barrier function.
Key Words: Muc2 Muc3 Muc4 MUC5AC mucus intestinal barrier phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: P. Plaisancié, INSERM UMR865, Faculté de Médecine R. Laennec, 7, rue Guillaume Paradin, 69008 Lyon, France (e-mail: plaisancie{at}lyon.inserm.fr)
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Science Signaling. ISSN 1937-9145 (online), 1945-0877 (print). Pre-2008: Science's STKE. ISSN 1525-8882