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Role of Epithelial-Mesenchyme Transition in Chlamydia Pathogenesis

Chlamydia trachomatis genital infection in women causes serious adverse reproductive complications, and is a strong co-factor for human papilloma virus (HPV)-associated cervical epithelial carcinoma. We tested the hypothesis that Chlamydia induces epithelial-mesenchyme transition (EMT) involving T c...

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Autores principales: Igietseme, Joseph U., Omosun, Yusuf, Stuchlik, Olga, Reed, Matthew S., Partin, James, He, Qing, Joseph, Kahaliah, Ellerson, Debra, Bollweg, Brigid, George, Zenas, Eko, Francis O., Bandea, Claudiu, Liu, Hsi, Yang, Genyan, Shieh, Wun-Ju, Pohl, Jan, Karem, Kevin, Black, Carolyn M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4683008/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26681200
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145198
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author Igietseme, Joseph U.
Omosun, Yusuf
Stuchlik, Olga
Reed, Matthew S.
Partin, James
He, Qing
Joseph, Kahaliah
Ellerson, Debra
Bollweg, Brigid
George, Zenas
Eko, Francis O.
Bandea, Claudiu
Liu, Hsi
Yang, Genyan
Shieh, Wun-Ju
Pohl, Jan
Karem, Kevin
Black, Carolyn M.
author_facet Igietseme, Joseph U.
Omosun, Yusuf
Stuchlik, Olga
Reed, Matthew S.
Partin, James
He, Qing
Joseph, Kahaliah
Ellerson, Debra
Bollweg, Brigid
George, Zenas
Eko, Francis O.
Bandea, Claudiu
Liu, Hsi
Yang, Genyan
Shieh, Wun-Ju
Pohl, Jan
Karem, Kevin
Black, Carolyn M.
author_sort Igietseme, Joseph U.
collection PubMed
description Chlamydia trachomatis genital infection in women causes serious adverse reproductive complications, and is a strong co-factor for human papilloma virus (HPV)-associated cervical epithelial carcinoma. We tested the hypothesis that Chlamydia induces epithelial-mesenchyme transition (EMT) involving T cell-derived TNF-alpha signaling, caspase activation, cleavage inactivation of dicer and dysregulation of micro-RNA (miRNA) in the reproductive epithelium; the pathologic process of EMT causes fibrosis and fertility-related epithelial dysfunction, and also provides the co-factor function for HPV-related cervical epithelial carcinoma. Using a combination of microarrays, immunohistochemistry and proteomics, we showed that chlamydia altered the expression of crucial miRNAs that control EMT, fibrosis and tumorigenesis; specifically, miR-15a, miR-29b, miR-382 and MiR-429 that maintain epithelial integrity were down-regulated, while miR-9, mi-R-19a, miR-22 and miR-205 that promote EMT, fibrosis and tumorigenesis were up-regulated. Chlamydia induced EMT in vitro and in vivo, marked by the suppression of normal epithelial cell markers especially E-cadherin but up-regulation of mesenchymal markers of pathological EMT, including T-cadherin, MMP9, and fibronectin. Also, Chlamydia upregulated pro-EMT regulators, including the zinc finger E-box binding homeobox protein, ZEB1, Snail1/2, and thrombospondin1 (Thbs1), but down-regulated anti-EMT and fertility promoting proteins (i.e., the major gap junction protein connexin 43 (Cx43), Mets1, Add1Scarb1 and MARCKSL1). T cell-derived TNF-alpha signaling was required for chlamydial-induced infertility and caspase inhibitors prevented both infertility and EMT. Thus, chlamydial-induced T cell-derived TNF-alpha activated caspases that inactivated dicer, causing alteration in the expression of reproductive epithelial miRNAs and induction of EMT. EMT causes epithelial malfunction, fibrosis, infertility, and the enhancement of tumorigenesis of HPV oncogene-transformed epithelial cells. These findings provide a novel understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of chlamydia-associated diseases, which may guide a rational prevention strategy.
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spelling pubmed-46830082015-12-31 Role of Epithelial-Mesenchyme Transition in Chlamydia Pathogenesis Igietseme, Joseph U. Omosun, Yusuf Stuchlik, Olga Reed, Matthew S. Partin, James He, Qing Joseph, Kahaliah Ellerson, Debra Bollweg, Brigid George, Zenas Eko, Francis O. Bandea, Claudiu Liu, Hsi Yang, Genyan Shieh, Wun-Ju Pohl, Jan Karem, Kevin Black, Carolyn M. PLoS One Research Article Chlamydia trachomatis genital infection in women causes serious adverse reproductive complications, and is a strong co-factor for human papilloma virus (HPV)-associated cervical epithelial carcinoma. We tested the hypothesis that Chlamydia induces epithelial-mesenchyme transition (EMT) involving T cell-derived TNF-alpha signaling, caspase activation, cleavage inactivation of dicer and dysregulation of micro-RNA (miRNA) in the reproductive epithelium; the pathologic process of EMT causes fibrosis and fertility-related epithelial dysfunction, and also provides the co-factor function for HPV-related cervical epithelial carcinoma. Using a combination of microarrays, immunohistochemistry and proteomics, we showed that chlamydia altered the expression of crucial miRNAs that control EMT, fibrosis and tumorigenesis; specifically, miR-15a, miR-29b, miR-382 and MiR-429 that maintain epithelial integrity were down-regulated, while miR-9, mi-R-19a, miR-22 and miR-205 that promote EMT, fibrosis and tumorigenesis were up-regulated. Chlamydia induced EMT in vitro and in vivo, marked by the suppression of normal epithelial cell markers especially E-cadherin but up-regulation of mesenchymal markers of pathological EMT, including T-cadherin, MMP9, and fibronectin. Also, Chlamydia upregulated pro-EMT regulators, including the zinc finger E-box binding homeobox protein, ZEB1, Snail1/2, and thrombospondin1 (Thbs1), but down-regulated anti-EMT and fertility promoting proteins (i.e., the major gap junction protein connexin 43 (Cx43), Mets1, Add1Scarb1 and MARCKSL1). T cell-derived TNF-alpha signaling was required for chlamydial-induced infertility and caspase inhibitors prevented both infertility and EMT. Thus, chlamydial-induced T cell-derived TNF-alpha activated caspases that inactivated dicer, causing alteration in the expression of reproductive epithelial miRNAs and induction of EMT. EMT causes epithelial malfunction, fibrosis, infertility, and the enhancement of tumorigenesis of HPV oncogene-transformed epithelial cells. These findings provide a novel understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of chlamydia-associated diseases, which may guide a rational prevention strategy. Public Library of Science 2015-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4683008/ /pubmed/26681200 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145198 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Igietseme, Joseph U.
Omosun, Yusuf
Stuchlik, Olga
Reed, Matthew S.
Partin, James
He, Qing
Joseph, Kahaliah
Ellerson, Debra
Bollweg, Brigid
George, Zenas
Eko, Francis O.
Bandea, Claudiu
Liu, Hsi
Yang, Genyan
Shieh, Wun-Ju
Pohl, Jan
Karem, Kevin
Black, Carolyn M.
Role of Epithelial-Mesenchyme Transition in Chlamydia Pathogenesis
title Role of Epithelial-Mesenchyme Transition in Chlamydia Pathogenesis
title_full Role of Epithelial-Mesenchyme Transition in Chlamydia Pathogenesis
title_fullStr Role of Epithelial-Mesenchyme Transition in Chlamydia Pathogenesis
title_full_unstemmed Role of Epithelial-Mesenchyme Transition in Chlamydia Pathogenesis
title_short Role of Epithelial-Mesenchyme Transition in Chlamydia Pathogenesis
title_sort role of epithelial-mesenchyme transition in chlamydia pathogenesis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4683008/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26681200
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145198
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