Abstract

BackgroundInflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a family of debilitating disorders that affects more than 1 million people in the United States. Many animal studies of IBD use a dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) mouse model of colitis that induces rapid and severe colitis symptoms. Although the typical seven-day DSS model is appropriate for many studies, it destroys intestinal barrier function and results in intestinal permeability that is substantially higher than what is typically observed in patients. As such, therapies that enhance or restore barrier integrity are difficult or impossible to evaluate.MethodsWe identify administration conditions that result in more physiologically relevant intestinal damage by systematically varying the duration of DSS administration. We administered 3.0% DSS for four to seven days and assessed disease metrics including weight, fecal consistency, intestinal permeability, spleen weight, and colon length. Histology was performed to assess the structural integrity of the intestinal epithelium.ResultsExtended exposure (seven days) to DSS resulted in substantial, unrecoverable loss of intestinal structure and intestinal permeability increases of greater than 600-fold. Attenuated DSS administration durations (four days) produced less severe symptoms by all metrics. Intestinal permeability increased only 8-fold compared to healthy mice, better recapitulating the 2–18 fold increases in permeability observed in patients. The attenuated model retains the hallmark properties of colitis against which to compare therapeutic candidates. Our results demonstrate that an attenuated DSS colitis model obtains clinically relevant increases in intestinal permeability, enabling the effective evaluation of therapeutic candidates that promote barrier function.

Highlights

  • Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a set of painful and debilitating disorders that affects approximately 1.6 million Americans, with upward of 70,000 new diagnoses each year (Loftus, 2004; Kaplan, 2015; Colombel & Mahadevan, 2017)

  • The use of an animal model that recapitulates key aspects of colitis is crucial to the study of disease mechanisms and evaluation of potential IBD therapeutics

  • dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) administration inflicts widespread damage to the intestinal epithelium that results in permeability increases far higher than those observed in clinical IBD (Welcker et al, 2004; May, Sutherland & Meddings, 1993)

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Summary

Introduction

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a set of painful and debilitating disorders that affects approximately 1.6 million Americans, with upward of 70,000 new diagnoses each year (Loftus, 2004; Kaplan, 2015; Colombel & Mahadevan, 2017). Expanding the utility of the dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) mouse model to induce a clinically relevant loss of intestinal barrier function. The full mechanisms through which the disease develops remain uncertain, evidence points to loss of intestinal barrier function as a key aspect of clinical IBD. Many animal studies of IBD use a dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) mouse model of colitis that induces rapid and severe colitis symptoms. The typical seven-day DSS model is appropriate for many studies, it destroys intestinal barrier function and results in intestinal permeability that is substantially higher than what is typically observed in patients. Our results demonstrate that an attenuated DSS colitis model obtains clinically relevant increases in intestinal permeability, enabling the effective evaluation of therapeutic candidates that promote barrier function

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