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Pathophysiological role of Toll-like receptor 5 engagement by bacterial flagellin in colonic inflammation

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2005

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National Academy of Sciences
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Rhee, S. H., E. Im, M. Riegler, E. Kokkotou, M. O’Brien, and C. Pothoulakis. 2005. “Pathophysiological Role of Toll-like Receptor 5 Engagement by Bacterial Flagellin in Colonic Inflammation.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102 (38): 13610–15. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0502174102.

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Abstract

Commensal and enteroinvasive microbes in the human gut release bacterial flagellin, a specific microbial ligand of Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5). However, the pathophysiological role of bacterial flagellin in gastrointestinal inflammation has not been determined. Here we evaluated the role of bacterial flagellin using native human colonic mucosa and the mouse colitis model of dextran sulfate sodium (DSS). We demonstrate that, in intact human colonic mucosa, the f lagellin/TLR5 response occurs only after exposure to the basolateral, not the apical, surface, implying a basolaterally polarized TLR5 response in human colonic mucosa. In this context, flagellin exposure to injured colonic mucosa due to DSS administration in mice resulted in a TLR5-associated response evaluated by in vivo activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2 (MEK1/2) and elevated IL-6, TNF-alpha, and kerati nocyte-cle rived chemokine production, whereas intact colonic mucosa did not respond to flagellin. Moreover, flagellin exposure to injured mouse colon in vivo, but not to intact colon, also significantly aggravated colonic inflammation, increased mouse mortality, and enhanced histopathological damage in the colonic mucosa. However, the TLR2-specific agonist, pepticloglycan or lipoteichoic acid, did not cause an inflammatory response in intact or DSS-injured mouse colon. Furthermore, intracolonic flagellin administration in mice causes severe apoptosis in colonic epithelium disrupted by DSS administration. These data suggest that intracolonic flagellin via TLR5 engagement is able to elicit inflammatory responses in disrupted colon, whereas the normal colon is not responsive to bacterial flagellin. These results demonstrate that bacterial flagellin plays an important role in the development and progress of colitis.

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