Vol. 283, Issue 3, G567-G575, September 2002
Upregulation of CFTR expression but not SLC26A3 and SLC9A3 in
ulcerative colitis
H.
Lohi1,*,
S.
Mäkelä1,*,
K.
Pulkkinen1,
P.
Höglund5,
M.-L.
Karjalainen-Lindsberg2,
P.
Puolakkainen3, and
J.
Kere4,6
Departments of 1 Medical Genetics,
2 Pathology, and 3 Surgery, Helsinki
University Central Hospital, 4 Finnish Genome
Center, and 5 Hospital for Children and Adolescents,
Biomedicum, University of Helsinki, 00014 Helsinki,
Finland; and 6 Department of
Biosciences at Novum, Karolinska Institute, 14157 Huddinge,
Sweden
In inflamed colonic mucosa, the equilibrium
between absorptive and secretory functions for electrolyte and salt
transport is disturbed. We compared the expression of three major
mediators of the intestinal salt transport between healthy and inflamed colonic mucosa to understand the pathophysiology of diarrhea in inflammatory bowel disease. Expression levels of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) (Cl
channel), SLC26A3
(Cl
/HCO
exchanger) and SLC9A3
(Na+/H+ exchanger) mRNAs were measured by
real-time quantitative RT-PCR in peroperative colonic samples
from controls (n = 4) and patients with ulcerative
colitis (n = 10). Several samples were obtained from
each individual. Tissue samples were divided into three subgroups according to their histological degree of inflammation. Expression of
CFTR and SLC26A3 proteins were determined by immunohistochemistry and
Western blotting from the same samples, respectively. Increased expression of CFTR mRNA was observed in all three groups of affected tissue samples, most pronounced in mildly inflamed colonic mucosa (5-fold increase in expression; P < 0.001). The
expression of the CFTR protein was detected from health and inflamed
colon tissue. Although the expression of the SLC26A3 mRNA was
significantly decreased in severe ulcerative colitis (P < 0.05), the SLC26A3 protein levels remained unchanged in all groups.
The expression of SLC9A3 mRNA was significantly changed between the
mild and severe groups. Intestinal inflammation modulates the
expression of three major mediators of intestinal salt transport and
may contribute to diarrhea in ulcerative colitis both by increasing transepithelial Cl
secretion and by inhibiting the
epithelial NaCl absorption.
inflammation; anion transport; diarrhea; inflammatory
bowel disease; cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator
*
H. Lohi and S. Mäkelä contributed equally to this work.