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Publication : Defects in microvillus crosslinking sensitize to colitis and inflammatory bowel disease.

First Author  Mödl B Year  2023
Journal  EMBO Rep Volume  24
Issue  10 Pages  e57084
PubMed ID  37691494 Mgi Jnum  J:360853
Mgi Id  MGI:7540291 Doi  10.15252/embr.202357084
Citation  Modl B, et al. (2023) Defects in microvillus crosslinking sensitize to colitis and inflammatory bowel disease. EMBO Rep 24(10):e57084
abstractText  Intestinal epithelial cells are covered by the brush border, which consists of densely packed microvilli. The Intermicrovillar Adhesion Complex (IMAC) links the microvilli and is required for proper brush border organization. Whether microvillus crosslinking is involved in the intestinal barrier function or colitis is currently unknown. We investigate the role of microvillus crosslinking in colitis in mice with deletion of the IMAC component CDHR5. Electron microscopy shows pronounced brush border defects in CDHR5-deficient mice. The defects result in severe mucosal damage after exposure to the colitis-inducing agent DSS. DSS increases the permeability of the mucus layer and brings bacteria in direct contact with the disorganized brush border of CDHR5-deficient mice. This correlates with bacterial invasion into the epithelial cell layer which precedes epithelial apoptosis and inflammation. Single-cell RNA sequencing data of patients with ulcerative colitis reveals downregulation of CDHR5 in enterocytes of diseased areas. Our results provide experimental evidence that a combination of microvillus crosslinking defects with increased permeability of the mucus layer sensitizes to inflammatory bowel disease.
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