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Zinc prevents intestinal epithelial barrier dysfunction induced by alpha-hemolysin-producing Escherichia coli 536 infection in porcine colon. | LitMetric

Zinc prevents intestinal epithelial barrier dysfunction induced by alpha-hemolysin-producing Escherichia coli 536 infection in porcine colon.

Vet Microbiol

Institute of Clinical Physiology/Nutritional Medicine, Medical Department Division of Gastroenterology, Infectiology and Rheumatology, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: April 2020

Zinc treatment is beneficial for infectious diarrhea or colitis. This study aims to characterize the pathomechanisms of the epithelial barrier dysfunction caused by alpha-hemolysin (HlyA)-expressing Escherichia coli in the colon mucosa and the mitigating effects of zinc ions. We performed Ussing chamber experiments on porcine colon epithelium and infected the tissues with HlyA-producing E. coli. Colon mucosa from piglets was obtained from a feeding trial with defined normal or high dose zinc feeding (pre-conditioning). Additional to the zinc feeding, zinc was added to the luminal compartment of the Ussing chamber. Transepithelial electrical resistance (TER) was measured during the infection of the living tissue and subsequently the tissues were immuno-stained for confocal microscopy. Zinc applied to the luminal compartment was effective in preventing from E. coli-induced epithelial barrier dysfunction in Ussing chamber experiments. In contrast, zinc pre-conditioning of colon mucosae when zinc ions were missing subsequently in the luminal compartment was not sufficient to prevent epithelial barrier impairment during E. coli infection. The pathological changes caused by E. coli HlyA were alterations of tight junction proteins claudin-4 and claudin-5, focal leak formation, and cell exfoliation which reflected the paracellular barrier defect measured by a reduced TER. In microscopic analysis of luminal zinc-treated mucosae these changes were absent. In conclusion, continuous presence of unbound zinc ions in the luminal compartment is essential for the protective action of zinc against E. coli HlyA. This suggests the usage of zinc as therapeutic regimen, while prophylactic intervention by high dietary zinc loads may be less useful.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2020.108632DOI Listing

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