AI Article Synopsis

  • Ras mutations lead to altered tight junctions in epithelial cells, causing specific increases in permeability to certain solutes like D-mannitol and polyethylene glycol.
  • While transepithelial electrical resistance rises, indicating changes in ion permeability, there’s a "ceiling" on solute size that can cross the barrier, suggesting no loss of cells or junctions, despite changes in claudin levels.
  • The changes in permeability and tight junction composition may impact tumor growth, as they allow different solutes to pass through the epithelial barrier, possibly influencing cancer progression.

Article Abstract

Although ras mutations have been shown to affect epithelial architecture and polarity, their role in altering tight junctions remains unclear. Transfection of a valine-12 mutated ras construct into LLC-PK1 renal epithelia produces leakiness of tight junctions to certain types of solutes. Transepithelial permeability of D-mannitol increases sixfold but transepithelial electrical resistance increases >40%. This indicates decreased paracellular permeability to NaCl but increased permeability to nonelectrolytes. Permeability increases to D-mannitol (Mr 182), polyethylene glycol (Mr 4000), and 10,000-Mr methylated dextran but not to 2,000,000-Mr methylated dextran. This implies a "ceiling" on the size of solutes that can cross a ras-mutated epithelial barrier and therefore that the increased permeability is not due to loss of cells or junctions. Although the abundance of claudin-2 declined to undetectable levels in the ras-overexpressing cells compared with vector controls, levels of occludin and claudins 1, 4, and 7 increased. The abundance of claudins-3 and -5 remained unchanged. An increase in extracellular signal-regulated kinase-2 phosphorylation suggests that the downstream effects on the tight junction may be due to changes in the mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathway. These selective changes in permeability may influence tumorigenesis by the types of solutes now able to cross the epithelial barrier.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1289400PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e05-04-0294DOI Listing

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