Tetrandrine attenuates intestinal epithelial barrier defects caused by colitis through promoting the expression of Occludin via the AhR-miR-429 pathway

The elevated intestinal permeability due to mucosal barrier defects is not only secondary to inflammatory bowel disease but also precedes enteritis. Tetrandrine, a bisbenzyl isoquinoline alkaloid isolated from the dried roots of Stephamis tetlandra S. Moor, was previously demonstrated to ameliorate...

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Published inThe FASEB journal Vol. 35; no. 5; p. e21502
Main Authors Chu, Yuyao, Zhu, Yanrong, Zhang, Yajing, Liu, Xiaojing, Guo, Yilei, Chang, Lan, Yun, Xinming, Wei, Zhifeng, Xia, Yufeng, Dai, Yue
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.05.2021
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Summary:The elevated intestinal permeability due to mucosal barrier defects is not only secondary to inflammatory bowel disease but also precedes enteritis. Tetrandrine, a bisbenzyl isoquinoline alkaloid isolated from the dried roots of Stephamis tetlandra S. Moor, was previously demonstrated to ameliorate colitis induced by dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) in mice. Here, we investigate whether and how tetrandrine protects against the disruption of the intestinal epithelial barrier under colitis condition. The data show that oral administration of tetrandrine significantly counteracted the increase of intestinal permeability in DSS-treated mice, enhanced the mRNA and protein expression of Occludin and Claudin1 in the colon, but hardly affected the expression of ZO-1 and Mucin2. In vitro, tetrandrine treatment rescued the decrease of monolayer transmembrane resistance and the increase of epithelial cell permeability induced by TNF-α, upregulated the expression of Occludin, and downregulated the expression of Claudin1 but did not affect the expression of ZO-1. The siRNA of Occludin largely weakened the protective effect of tetrandrine on the epithelial barrier function in Caco-2 cells. MiR-429 mimic obviously counteracted the upregulation of tetrandrine on the expression of Occludin and the amelioration on epithelial barrier defects, in contrast, miR-429 inhibitor showed the opposite effects. The antagonist (CH223191) and siAhR of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) nearly completely diminished the effects of tetrandrine, including inhibition of the miR429 expression, the upregulation of Occludin expression, and amelioration of intestinal epithelial barrier defects in Caco-2 cells. In colitis mice, CH223191 significantly weakened the protective effect of tetrandrine on colitis and intestinal mucosal barrier and diminished the downregulation on miR-429 expression and the promotion on Occludin expression in the colon. In summary, tetrandrine can attenuate the intestinal epithelial barrier defects in colitis through promoting Occludin expression via the AhR/miR-429 pathway, and it might be used to treat colitis as a barrier protector.
ISSN:1530-6860
DOI:10.1096/fj.202002086RR