Xu D Z, Lu Q, Kubicka R, Deitch E A
Department of Surgery, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey Medical School, Newark 07103, USA.
J Trauma. 1999 Feb;46(2):280-5. doi: 10.1097/00005373-199902000-00014.
Previously, using in vivo models, we have demonstrated that ischemia/reperfusion can increase intestinal mucosal permeability, promote bacterial translocation, and induce gut cytokine production. Because of the cellular heterogeneity of the gut, however, studies investigating the direct effects of hypoxia/reoxygenation on intestinal epithelial cells are confounded in in vivo model systems. Consequently, this study examines oxidant-mediated enterocyte injury using an in vitro intestinal enterocyte hypoxia/reoxygenation model system.
Two intestinal epithelial cell lines, IEC-6 and Caco-2, were seeded onto 3-microm filters in a Transwell bicameral system and grown until tight junction integrity was established. Cells were subjected to hypoxia in a sealed chamber with 95% nitrogen and 5% carbon dioxide and incubated at 37 degrees C for 60 or 90 minutes. Reoxygenation was initiated by replacing the media and putting the cells in an environment of room air plus 5% carbon dioxide. Permeability and bacterial translocation were assayed by measuring the phenol red concentration and culturing the bacteria that crossed the cell monolayer and reached the basal chamber of the bicameral system. Monolayer tight junction integrity was monitored by serial measurements of transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER), and cell viability was assessed by trypan blue dye.
IEC-6 cell monolayers subjected to 60 or 90 minutes of hypoxia showed significantly higher permeability to phenol red, with 54+/-5% and 57+/-5% of the dye crossing the monolayers, respectively, compared with normoxic control (38+/-2%; p < 0.01). Caco-2 cell monolayers also had increased permeability to phenol red, with 24+/-6% and 20+/-4% of the phenol red crossing the monolayer after 60 or 90 minutes of hypoxia, respectively, compared with 8+/-3% in the normoxic controls (p < 0.01). At 3 hours after challenge with Escherichia coli, the monolayers subjected to 60 or 90 minutes of hypoxia had significantly increased bacterial translocation (IEC-6 cells, p < 0.05; Caco-2 cells, p < 0.01) compared with controls. The increased permeability of the hypoxic Caco-2 and IEC-6 monolayers was associated with a decrease in TEER beginning as early as 1 hour after reoxygenation (p < 0.01). Cell viability, however, was not decreased.
These results indicate that hypoxia/reoxygenation can directly impair cellular function as manifested by increased monolayer permeability to phenol red, increased E. coli bacterial translocation, and a decrease in TEER values.
此前,我们利用体内模型证明,缺血/再灌注可增加肠黏膜通透性,促进细菌移位,并诱导肠道细胞因子产生。然而,由于肠道细胞的异质性,在体内模型系统中研究缺氧/复氧对肠上皮细胞的直接影响存在混淆因素。因此,本研究使用体外肠上皮细胞缺氧/复氧模型系统来检测氧化应激介导的肠上皮细胞损伤。
将两种肠上皮细胞系IEC-6和Caco-2接种到Transwell双室系统的3微米滤膜上,培养至紧密连接完整性建立。细胞在含有95%氮气和5%二氧化碳的密封 chamber 中进行缺氧处理,并在37℃孵育60或90分钟。通过更换培养基并将细胞置于含5%二氧化碳的空气环境中开始复氧。通过测量酚红浓度以及培养穿过细胞单层并到达双室系统基底 chamber 的细菌来检测通透性和细菌移位情况。通过连续测量跨上皮电阻(TEER)来监测单层紧密连接的完整性,并用台盼蓝染料评估细胞活力。
与常氧对照(38±2%)相比,IEC-6细胞单层在缺氧60或90分钟后对酚红的通透性显著更高,分别有54±5%和57±5%的染料穿过单层(p<0.01)。Caco-2细胞单层对酚红的通透性也增加,缺氧60或90分钟后分别有24±6%和20±4%的酚红穿过单层,而常氧对照为8±3%(p<0.01)。在用大肠杆菌攻击3小时后,与对照相比,经历60或90分钟缺氧处理的单层细菌移位显著增加(IEC-6细胞,p<0.05;Caco-2细胞,p<0.01)。缺氧的Caco-2和IEC-6单层通透性增加与复氧后最早1小时开始的TEER降低有关(p<0.01)。然而,细胞活力并未降低。
这些结果表明,缺氧/复氧可直接损害细胞功能,表现为单层对酚红的通透性增加、大肠杆菌细菌移位增加以及TEER值降低。