AI Article Synopsis

  • Airway epithelial tight junction (TJ) proteins typically protect against external threats, but during bacterial infections like those from Staphylococcus aureus, these TJs get disrupted, allowing glucose to accumulate and feed bacteria.
  • Metformin, a diabetes medication, enhances the barrier function of these TJs by stabilizing proteins like ZO-1 and occludin, potentially through pathways involving AMPK and PKCζ.
  • The study found that metformin speeds up TJ reassembly after disruption and increases the presence of full-length occludin, signifying its beneficial role in maintaining airway epithelial integrity during bacterial infections.

Article Abstract

Airway epithelial tight junction (TJ) proteins form a resistive barrier to the external environment, however, during respiratory bacterial infection TJs become disrupted compromising barrier function. This promotes glucose flux/accumulation into the lumen which acts as a nutrient source for bacterial growth. Metformin used for the treatment of diabetes increases transepithelial resistance (TEER) and partially prevents the effect of bacteria but the mechanisms of action are unclear. We investigated the effect of metformin and Staphylococcus aureus on TJ proteins, zonula occludins (ZO)-1 and occludin in human airway epithelial cells (H441). We also explored the role of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and PKCζ in metformin-induced effects. Pretreatment with metformin prevented the S. aureus-induced changes in ZO-1 and occludin. Metformin also promoted increased abundance of full length over smaller cleaved occludin proteins. The nonspecific PKC inhibitor staurosporine reduced TEER but did not prevent the effect of metformin indicating that the pathway may involve atypical PKC isoforms. Investigation of TJ reassembly after calcium depletion showed that metformin increased TEER more rapidly and promoted the abundance and localization of occludin at the TJ. These effects were inhibited by the AMPK inhibitor, compound C and the PKCζ pseudosubstrate inhibitor (PSI). Metformin increased phosphorylation of occludin and acetyl-coA-carboxylase but only the former was prevented by PSI. This study demonstrates that metformin improves TJ barrier function by promoting the abundance and assembly of full length occludin at the TJ and that this process involves phosphorylation of the protein via an AMPK-PKCζ pathway.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6307806PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcmm.13929DOI Listing

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