RRC ID 12403
著者 Wu WK, Law PT, Wong HP, Lam EK, Tai EK, Shin VY, Cho CH.
タイトル Shift of homeostasis from parenchymal regeneration to fibroblast proliferation induced by lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophages in gastric mucosal healing in vitro.
ジャーナル Wound Repair Regen
Abstract Wound healing in the gastrointestinal tract is an orderly process involving orchestrated responses of various cell types. Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are major components of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, which are known to impair gastric ulcer healing in animals. The influence of LPS on intercellular communication in wound healing, however, is unknown. We examined the effects of LPS-induced macrophage activation on the proliferative response in cultured rat gastric epithelial cells (RGM-1) and fibroblasts JHU-25. Rat peritoneal resident macrophages were activated with increasing doses of LPS. The supernatant from the activated macrophage preparation, designated as macrophage-conditioned medium, was then used to treat RGM-1 or JHU-25 cells. Cell proliferation and migration were determined by [(3)H]-thymidine incorporation and a monolayer wound-healing assay, respectively. Macrophage-conditioned medium significantly suppressed RGM-1 cell proliferation but had no effect on cell migration. The same medium, however, increased JHU-25 cell proliferation. LPS treatment alone suppressed JHU-25 cell proliferation while it had no effect on RGM-1 cell proliferation, indicating that the differential effects of the macrophage-conditioned medium on cell proliferation were elicited by the factors derived from macrophages. In this regard, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha stimulated while interleukin (IL)-1beta suppressed RGM-1 cell proliferation, suggesting that IL-1beta but not TNF-alpha may play a part in the mediation of the antiproliferative effect of macrophage-conditioned medium on gastric epithelial cells. In contrast, IL-1beta suppressed while TNF-alpha had no effect on JHU-25 cell proliferation. Collectively, LPS-activated macrophages delay gastric mucosal regeneration but promote fibroblast proliferation in vitro. Such changes may partly elucidate the detrimental effect of bacterial infection on tissue repair in the stomach.
巻・号 15(2)
ページ 221-6
公開日 2007-1-1
DOI 10.1111/j.1524-475X.2007.00208.x
PII WRR208
PMID 17352754
MeSH Animals Cell Movement Cell Proliferation Cells, Cultured Culture Media, Conditioned Fibroblasts / physiology* Gastric Mucosa / physiology* Homeostasis / physiology* Lipopolysaccharides / pharmacology Macrophages / physiology Male Rats Rats, Sprague-Dawley Wound Healing / physiology*
IF 2.471
引用数 5
WOS 分野 SURGERY DERMATOLOGY MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL CELL BIOLOGY
リソース情報
ヒト・動物細胞 RGM1(RCB0876)