Exposure of Colon-Derived Epithelial Monolayers to Fecal Luminal Factors from Patients with Colon Cancer and Ulcerative Colitis Results in Distinct Gene Expression Patterns
Journal article, 2024

Microbiota and luminal components may affect epithelial integrity and thus participate in the pathophysiology of colon cancer (CC) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Therefore, we aimed to determine the effects of fecal luminal factors derived from patients with CC and ulcerative colitis (UC) on the colonic epithelium using a standardized colon-derived two-dimensional epithelial monolayer. The complex primary human stem cell-derived intestinal epithelium model, termed RepliGut® Planar, was expanded and passaged in a two-dimensional culture which underwent stimulation for 48 h with fecal supernatants (FS) from CC patients (n = 6), UC patients with active disease (n = 6), and healthy subjects (HS) (n = 6). mRNA sequencing of monolayers was performed and cytokine secretion in the basolateral cell culture compartment was measured. The addition of fecal supernatants did not impair the integrity of the colon-derived epithelial monolayer. However, monolayers stimulated with fecal supernatants from CC patients and UC patients presented distinct gene expression patterns. Comparing UC vs. CC, 29 genes were downregulated and 33 genes were upregulated, for CC vs. HS, 17 genes were downregulated and five genes were upregulated, and for UC vs. HS, three genes were downregulated and one gene was upregulated. The addition of FS increased secretion of IL8 with no difference between the study groups. Fecal luminal factors from CC patients and UC patients induce distinct colonic epithelial gene expression patterns, potentially reflecting the disease pathophysiology. The culture of colonic epithelial monolayers with fecal supernatants derived from patients may facilitate the exploration of IBD- and CC-related intestinal microenvironmental and barrier interactions.

epithelial barrier

intestinal microenvironment

colon cancer

inflammatory bowel disease

epithelial monolayers

Author

Maria K. Magnusson

University of Gothenburg

Anna Bas Forsberg

University of Gothenburg

Alexandra Verveda

University of Gothenburg

Maria Sapnara

University of Gothenburg

Julie Lorent

Science for Life Laboratory (SciLifeLab)

Otto Savolainen

University of Eastern Finland

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Infrastructures

Yvonne Wettergren

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

University of Gothenburg

Hans Strid

Södra Älvsborg Hospital (SÄS)

Magnus Simrén

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

University of Gothenburg

Lena Öhman

University of Gothenburg

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

16616596 (ISSN) 14220067 (eISSN)

Vol. 25 18 9886

Subject Categories

Gastroenterology and Hepatology

DOI

10.3390/ijms25189886

More information

Latest update

10/15/2024