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Publication : Early endothelial damage and increased colonic vascular permeability in the development of experimental ulcerative colitis in rats and mice.

First Author  Tolstanova G Year  2012
Journal  Lab Invest Volume  92
Issue  1 Pages  9-21
PubMed ID  21894149 Mgi Jnum  J:180036
Mgi Id  MGI:5305014 Doi  10.1038/labinvest.2011.122
Citation  Tolstanova G, et al. (2012) Early endothelial damage and increased colonic vascular permeability in the development of experimental ulcerative colitis in rats and mice. Lab Invest 92(1):9-21
abstractText  The role of endothelial damage and increased vascular permeability (VP) in the pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis (UC) has not been investigated. We examined using functional, morphologic, and molecular biologic studies whether and to what extent the endothelial barrier dysfunction precedes enhanced epithelial permeability (EP) and the development of mucosal lesions during the early stages of experimental UC. We showed that in rats with iodoacetamide (IA)-induced UC increased colonic VP occurs early (ie, 2.6-fold increase at 15 min, P<0.01) preceding changes in epithelial barrier permeability. EP was unchanged at 15 and 30 min after IA administration and was increased 1.9-fold at 1 h and 6.7-fold at 2 h (both P<0.001) after IA. In the dextran sodium sulfate-induced slowly developing UC, colonic VP was significantly increased in 2 days (P<0.05) and EP only in 4 days (P<0.05). Mucosal endothelial injury led to hypoxia (P<0.05) of colonic surface epithelial cells 30 min after IA administration that was associated with increased expressions of transcription factors hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha and early growth response-1. Electron and light microscopy demonstrated areas of colonic mucosa with perivascular edema covered by intact layer of surface epithelial cells in both rat and mouse models of UC. This is the first demonstration in four models of UC that endothelial damage, increased colonic VP, perivascular edema, and epithelial hypoxia precede epithelial barrier dysfunction that is followed by erosions, ulceration, and inflammation in UC.
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