













|
|
Walter Fries,
Emanuela Mazzon, Stefano Squarzoni, Alessandro Martin, Diego Martines, Antonio
Micali, Giacomo Carlo Sturniolo, Sandra Citi, and Giuseppe Longo |
| |
Gastroenterologia,
Dip. to di Biomorfologia (WF, EM, AMi, GL), Università di Messina,
Messina; Istituto di Citomorfologia Normale e PatologicaCNR (SS), Bologna;
Cattedra Malattie Apparato Digerente (AMa, DM, GCS); and Dip. to di Biologia
(EM, SC), Università di Padova, Padova, Italy |
| |
Small intestine permeability is frequently altered in patients with Crohn's
disease and is thought to play a pathogenic role. The aim of this study
was to investigate the permeability and structure of small intestine tight
junctions (TJ) in an animal model of chronic distal colitis. Seven days
after colitis induction with trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid/ethanol, the
duodenal and ileal TJ were studied by means of transmission electron microscopy
using lanthanum nitrate, freeze fractures, and immunohistochemistry of
occludin, ZO-1, and cingulin. Animals treated with intrarectal ethanol
alone served as controls. In controls, 7.5% of duodenal and 9.6% of ileal
TJ were permeable to lanthanum, whereas in colitis, permeability increased
significantly (79.5% and 72.9%, respectively; p < 0.001, both segments
compared with controls). In colitis, the percentage of "leaky"
junctions in duodena as well as in terminal ilea correlated positively
with the macroscopic colon damage score (p < 0.02 and p < 0.005,
respectively). Freeze-fracture analysis and immunohistochemistry of cingulin
and ZO-1 did not reveal any difference between control and treated animals,
whereas the signal of the transmembrane protein occludin was found to
be disrupted and irregular in both small intestine segments. Distal colitis
induces an increase of TJ permeability throughout the entire small intestine,
and the extent of alterations correlates with colonic damage. Alterations
in the transmembrane protein occludin seem to be responsible for the observed
changes. Further investigation is needed to elucidate the mechanism of
TJ alterations by a remote focus of inflammation. (Lab Invest 1999, 79:49-57).
|