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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 293: G222-G229, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajpgi.00405.2006
0193-1857/07 $8.00
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MUCOSAL BIOLOGY

Intestinal phenotype of variable-weight cystic fibrosis knockout mice

Juan C. Canale-Zambrano,1 Maya C. Poffenberger,1 Sean M. Cory,2 Daryl G. Humes,1 and Christina K. Haston1

1Meakins-Christie Laboratories and Departments of Medicine and Human Genetics and 2McGill Centre for Bioinformatics, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Submitted 31 August 2006 ; accepted in final form 26 March 2007

Cystic fibrosis (CF) transmembrane conductance regulator (Cftr) knockout mice present the clinical features of low body weight and intestinal disease permitting an assessment of the interrelatedness of these phenotypes in a controlled environment. To identify intestinal alterations that are affected by body weight in CF mice, the histological phenotypes of crypt-villus axis height, goblet cell hyperplasia, mast cell infiltrate, crypt cell proliferation, and apoptosis were measured in a population of 12-wk-old (C57BL/6 x BALB/cJ) F2 Cftrtm1UNC and non-CF mice presenting a range of body weight. In addition, cardiac blood samples were assessed, and gene expression profiling of the ileum was completed. Crypt-villus axis height decreased with increasing body weight in CF but not control mice. Intestinal crypts from CF mice had fewer apoptotic cells, per unit length, than did non-CF mice, and normalized cell proliferation was similar to control levels. Goblet cell hyperplasia and mast cell infiltration were increased in the CF intestine and identified to be independent of body weight. Blood triglyceride levels were found to be significantly lower in CF mice than in control mice but were not dependent on CF mouse weight. By expression profiling, genes of DNA replication and lipid metabolism were among those altered in CF mice relative to non-CF controls, and no differences in gene expression were measured between samples from CF mice in the 25th and 75th percentile for weight. In this CF mouse model, crypt elongation, due to an expanded proliferative zone and decreased apoptosis, was identified to be dependent on body weight.

correlation to body weight; cystic fibrosis intestinal morphology; expression profile



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: C. K. Haston, Meakins-Christie Laboratories, 3626 St. Urbain, Montreal, PQ, Canada H2X 2P2 (e-mail: christina.haston{at}mcgill.ca)







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