PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

The laminin response in inflammatory bowel disease: protection or malignancy?

  • Caroline Spenlé,
  • Olivier Lefebvre,
  • Joël Lacroute,
  • Agnès Méchine-Neuville,
  • Frédérick Barreau,
  • Hervé M Blottière,
  • Bernard Duclos,
  • Christiane Arnold,
  • Thomas Hussenet,
  • Joseph Hemmerlé,
  • Donald Gullberg,
  • Michèle Kedinger,
  • Lydia Sorokin,
  • Gertraud Orend,
  • Patricia Simon-Assmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111336
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. e111336

Abstract

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Laminins (LM), basement membrane molecules and mediators of epithelial-stromal communication, are crucial in tissue homeostasis. Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) are multifactorial pathologies where the microenvironment and in particular LM play an important yet poorly understood role in tissue maintenance, and in cancer progression which represents an inherent risk of IBD. Here we showed first that in human IBD colonic samples and in murine colitis the LMα1 and LMα5 chains are specifically and ectopically overexpressed with a concomitant nuclear p53 accumulation. Linked to this observation, we provided a mechanism showing that p53 induces LMα1 expression at the promoter level by ChIP analysis and this was confirmed by knockdown in cell transfection experiments. To mimic the human disease, we induced colitis and colitis-associated cancer by chemical treatment (DSS) combined or not with a carcinogen (AOM) in transgenic mice overexpressing LMα1 or LMα5 specifically in the intestine. We demonstrated that high LMα1 or LMα5 expression decreased susceptibility towards experimentally DSS-induced colon inflammation as assessed by histological scoring and decrease of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Yet in a pro-oncogenic context, we showed that LM would favor tumorigenesis as revealed by enhanced tumor lesion formation in both LM transgenic mice. Altogether, our results showed that nuclear p53 and associated overexpression of LMα1 and LMα5 protect tissue from inflammation. But in a mutation setting, the same LM molecules favor progression of IBD into colitis-associated cancer. Our transgenic mice represent attractive new models to acquire knowledge about the paradoxical effect of LM that mediate either tissue reparation or cancer according to the microenvironment. In the early phases of IBD, reinforcing basement membrane stability/organization could be a promising therapeutic approach.