International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2019)

Tilivalline- and Tilimycin-Independent Effects of <i>Klebsiella oxytoca</i> on Tight Junction-Mediated Intestinal Barrier Impairment

  • Nina A. Hering,
  • Anja Fromm,
  • Roland Bücker,
  • Gregor Gorkiewicz,
  • Ellen Zechner,
  • Christoph Högenauer,
  • Michael Fromm,
  • Jörg-Dieter Schulzke,
  • Hanno Troeger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20225595
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 22
p. 5595

Abstract

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Klebsiella oxytoca causes antibiotic-associated hemorrhagic colitis and diarrhea. This was attributed largely to its secreted cytotoxins tilivalline and tilimycin, inductors of epithelial apoptosis. To study whether Klebsiella oxytoca exerts further barrier effects, T84 monolayers were challenged with bacterial supernatants derived from tilivalline/tilimycin-producing AHC6 or its isogeneic tilivalline/tilimycin-deficient strain Mut-89. Both preparations decreased transepithelial resistance, enhanced fluorescein and FITC-dextran-4kDa permeabilities, and reduced expression of barrier-forming tight junction proteins claudin-5 and -8. Laser scanning microscopy indicated redistribution of both claudins off the tight junction region in T84 monolayers as well as in colon crypts of mice infected with AHC6 or Mut-89, indicating that these effects are tilivalline/tilimycin-independent. Furthermore, claudin-1 was affected, but only in a tilivalline/tilimycin-dependent manner. In conclusion, Klebsiella oxytoca induced intestinal barrier impairment by two mechanisms: the tilivalline/tilimycin-dependent one, acting by increasing cellular apoptosis and a tilivalline/tilimycin-independent one, acting by weakening the paracellular pathway through the tight junction proteins claudin-5 and -8.

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