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1 Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA
2 Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mdwinell{at}mcw.edu.
Intestinal epithelial cell migration plays a key role in gastrointestinal mucosal barrier formation,
enterocyte development, differentiation, turnover, wound healing, and adenocarcinoma
metastasis. Chemokines, through engagement of their corresponding receptors, are potent
mediators of directed cell migration and are critical in the establishment and regulation of innate
and adaptive immune responses. The aim of this study was to define the role for the chemokine
CXCL12 and its sole cognate receptor CXCR4 in regulating intestinal epithelial cell migration
and determine its impact on barrier integrity. CXCL12 stimulated the dose-dependent
chemotactic migration of human T84 colonic epithelial cells. Epithelial cell migration was
inhibited by CXCR4 neutralizing antibody, pertussis toxin, LY294002, and PD98059, thereby
implicating G
i, phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), and the ERK1/2 MAP kinase pathways in
CXCR4-specific signaling. CXCL12 was also shown to increase barrier integrity, as defined by
transepithelial resistance and paracellular flux across differentiating T84 monolayers. To
determine if CXCL12 regulated epithelial restitution we used the normal non-transformed IEC-6
rat epithelial cell wound healing model. Using RT-PCR, immunoblot analysis and
immunofluorescence microscopy, we first showed expression of both CXCR4 and its ligand by
IEC-6 cells. Next, we demonstrated that CXCL12 activated comparable signaling mechanisms
to stimulate epithelial migration in the absence of proliferation in wounded IEC-6 monolayers.
Taken together, these data indicate that CXCL12 signaling via CXCR4 directs intestinal
epithelial cell migration, barrier maturation, and restitution, consistent with an important
mechanistic role for these molecules in mucosal barrier integrity and innate host defense.
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