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Calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: Cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The goal of the study was to assess calcium alone and Aquamin, a multi-mineral natural product that contains magnesium and detectable levels of 72 trace elements in addition to calcium, for capacity to affect growth and differentiation in colonoid cultures derived from histologi...

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Autores principales: Attili, Durga, McClintock, Shannon D., Rizvi, Areeba H., Pandya, Shailja, Rehman, Humza, Nadeem, Daniyal M., Richter, Aliah, Thomas, Dafydd, Dame, Michael K., Turgeon, Danielle Kim, Varani, James, Aslam, Muhammad N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6469792/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30995271
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215122
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author Attili, Durga
McClintock, Shannon D.
Rizvi, Areeba H.
Pandya, Shailja
Rehman, Humza
Nadeem, Daniyal M.
Richter, Aliah
Thomas, Dafydd
Dame, Michael K.
Turgeon, Danielle Kim
Varani, James
Aslam, Muhammad N.
author_facet Attili, Durga
McClintock, Shannon D.
Rizvi, Areeba H.
Pandya, Shailja
Rehman, Humza
Nadeem, Daniyal M.
Richter, Aliah
Thomas, Dafydd
Dame, Michael K.
Turgeon, Danielle Kim
Varani, James
Aslam, Muhammad N.
author_sort Attili, Durga
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The goal of the study was to assess calcium alone and Aquamin, a multi-mineral natural product that contains magnesium and detectable levels of 72 trace elements in addition to calcium, for capacity to affect growth and differentiation in colonoid cultures derived from histologically-normal human colon tissue. METHODS: Colonoid cultures were maintained in a low-calcium (0.25 mM) medium or in medium supplemented with an amount of calcium (1.5–3.0 mM), either from calcium alone or Aquamin for a period of two weeks. This was shown in a previous study to induce differentiation in colonoids derived from large adenomas. Changes in growth, morphological features and protein expression profile were assessed at the end of the incubation period using a combination of phase-contrast and scanning electron microscopy, histology and immunohistology, proteomic assessment and transmission electron microscopy. RESULTS: Unlike the previously-studied tumor-derived colonoids (which remained un-differentiated in the absence of calcium-supplementation), normal tissue colonoids underwent differentiation as indicated by gross and microscopic appearance, a low proliferative index and high-level expression of cytokeratin 20 in the absence of intervention (i.e., in control condition). Only modest additional changes were seen in these parameters with either calcium alone or Aquamin (providing up to 3.0 mM calcium). In spite of this, proteomic analysis and immunohistochemistry revealed that both interventions induced strong up-regulation of proteins that promote cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesive functions, barrier formation and tissue integrity. Transmission electron microscopy revealed an increase in desmosomes in response to intervention. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate that colonoids derived from histologically normal human tissue can undergo differentiation in the presence of a low ambient calcium concentration. However, higher calcium levels induce elaboration of proteins that promote cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion. These changes could lead to improved barrier function and improved colon tissue health.
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spelling pubmed-64697922019-05-03 Calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: Cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity Attili, Durga McClintock, Shannon D. Rizvi, Areeba H. Pandya, Shailja Rehman, Humza Nadeem, Daniyal M. Richter, Aliah Thomas, Dafydd Dame, Michael K. Turgeon, Danielle Kim Varani, James Aslam, Muhammad N. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The goal of the study was to assess calcium alone and Aquamin, a multi-mineral natural product that contains magnesium and detectable levels of 72 trace elements in addition to calcium, for capacity to affect growth and differentiation in colonoid cultures derived from histologically-normal human colon tissue. METHODS: Colonoid cultures were maintained in a low-calcium (0.25 mM) medium or in medium supplemented with an amount of calcium (1.5–3.0 mM), either from calcium alone or Aquamin for a period of two weeks. This was shown in a previous study to induce differentiation in colonoids derived from large adenomas. Changes in growth, morphological features and protein expression profile were assessed at the end of the incubation period using a combination of phase-contrast and scanning electron microscopy, histology and immunohistology, proteomic assessment and transmission electron microscopy. RESULTS: Unlike the previously-studied tumor-derived colonoids (which remained un-differentiated in the absence of calcium-supplementation), normal tissue colonoids underwent differentiation as indicated by gross and microscopic appearance, a low proliferative index and high-level expression of cytokeratin 20 in the absence of intervention (i.e., in control condition). Only modest additional changes were seen in these parameters with either calcium alone or Aquamin (providing up to 3.0 mM calcium). In spite of this, proteomic analysis and immunohistochemistry revealed that both interventions induced strong up-regulation of proteins that promote cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesive functions, barrier formation and tissue integrity. Transmission electron microscopy revealed an increase in desmosomes in response to intervention. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate that colonoids derived from histologically normal human tissue can undergo differentiation in the presence of a low ambient calcium concentration. However, higher calcium levels induce elaboration of proteins that promote cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion. These changes could lead to improved barrier function and improved colon tissue health. Public Library of Science 2019-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6469792/ /pubmed/30995271 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215122 Text en © 2019 Attili et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Attili, Durga
McClintock, Shannon D.
Rizvi, Areeba H.
Pandya, Shailja
Rehman, Humza
Nadeem, Daniyal M.
Richter, Aliah
Thomas, Dafydd
Dame, Michael K.
Turgeon, Danielle Kim
Varani, James
Aslam, Muhammad N.
Calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: Cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity
title Calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: Cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity
title_full Calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: Cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity
title_fullStr Calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: Cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity
title_full_unstemmed Calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: Cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity
title_short Calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: Cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity
title_sort calcium-induced differentiation in normal human colonoid cultures: cell-cell / cell-matrix adhesion, barrier formation and tissue integrity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6469792/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30995271
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215122
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