Maintenance of colonic homeostasis by distinctive apical TLR9 signalling in intestinal epithelial cells

J Lee, JH Mo, K Katakura, I Alkalay, AN Rucker… - Nature cell …, 2006 - nature.com
J Lee, JH Mo, K Katakura, I Alkalay, AN Rucker, YT Liu, HK Lee, C Shen, G Cojocaru…
Nature cell biology, 2006nature.com
The mechanisms by which commensal bacteria suppress inflammatory signalling in the gut
are still unclear. Here, we present a cellular mechanism whereby the polarity of intestinal
epithelial cells (IECs) has a major role in colonic homeostasis. TLR9 activation through
apical and basolateral surface domains have distinct transcriptional responses, evident by
NF-κB activation and cDNA microarray analysis. Whereas basolateral TLR9 signals IκBα
degradation and activation of the NF-κB pathway, apical TLR9 stimulation invokes a unique …
Abstract
The mechanisms by which commensal bacteria suppress inflammatory signalling in the gut are still unclear. Here, we present a cellular mechanism whereby the polarity of intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) has a major role in colonic homeostasis. TLR9 activation through apical and basolateral surface domains have distinct transcriptional responses, evident by NF-κB activation and cDNA microarray analysis. Whereas basolateral TLR9 signals IκBα degradation and activation of the NF-κB pathway, apical TLR9 stimulation invokes a unique response in which ubiquitinated IκB accumulates in the cytoplasm preventing NF-κB activation. Furthermore, apical TLR9 stimulation confers intracellular tolerance to subsequent TLR challenges. IECs in TLR9-deficient mice, when compared with wild-type and TLR2-deficient mice, display a lower NF-κB activation threshold and these mice are highly susceptible to experimental colitis. Our data provide a case for organ-specific innate immunity in which TLR expression in polarized IECs has uniquely evolved to maintain colonic homeostasis and regulate tolerance and inflammation.
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