Desmoglein 2-mediated adhesion is required for intestinal epithelial barrier integrity

N Schlegel, M Meir, WM Heupel… - American Journal …, 2010 - journals.physiology.org
N Schlegel, M Meir, WM Heupel, B Holthöfer, RE Leube, J Waschke
American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver …, 2010journals.physiology.org
The integrity of intercellular junctions that form the “terminal bar” in intestinal epithelium is
crucial for sealing the intestinal barrier. Whereas specific roles of tight and adherens
junctions are well known, the contribution of desmosomal adhesion for maintaining the
intestinal epithelial barrier has not been specifically addressed. For the present study, we
generated a desmoglein 2 antibody directed against the extracellular domain (Dsg2 ED) to
test whether impaired Dsg2-mediated adhesion affects intestinal epithelial barrier functions …
The integrity of intercellular junctions that form the “terminal bar” in intestinal epithelium is crucial for sealing the intestinal barrier. Whereas specific roles of tight and adherens junctions are well known, the contribution of desmosomal adhesion for maintaining the intestinal epithelial barrier has not been specifically addressed. For the present study, we generated a desmoglein 2 antibody directed against the extracellular domain (Dsg2 ED) to test whether impaired Dsg2-mediated adhesion affects intestinal epithelial barrier functions in vitro. This antibody was able to specifically block Dsg2 interaction in cell-free atomic-force microscopy experiments. For in vitro studies of the intestinal barrier we used Caco2 cells following differentiation into tight enterocyte-like epithelial monolayers. Application of Dsg2 ED to Caco2 monolayers resulted in increased cell dissociation compared with controls in a dispase-based enterocyte dissociation assay. Under similar conditions, Dsg2 antibody significantly decreased transepithelial electrical resistance and increased FITC-dextran flux, indicating that Dsg2 interaction is critically involved in the maintenance of epithelial intestinal barrier functions. As revealed by immunostaining, this was due to Dsg2 ED antibody-induced rupture of tight junctions because tight junction proteins claudins 1, 4, and 5, occludin, and tight junction-associated protein zonula occludens-1 were partially removed from cell borders by Dsg2 ED treatment. Similar results were obtained by application of a commercial monoclonal antibody directed against the ED of Dsg2. Antibody-induced effects were blocked by absorption experiments using Dsg2-Fc-coated beads. Our data indicate that Dsg2-mediated adhesion affects tight junction integrity and is required to maintain intestinal epithelial barrier properties.
American Physiological Society