Abstract

In cultured human colonic epithelial cells and mouse colonic tissue, exposure to the common food additive carrageenan leads to inflammation, activation of Wnt signaling, increased Wnt9A expression, and decline in the activity of the enzyme arylsulfatase B (ARSB; N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase). In this study, the novel transcriptional mechanism by which carrageenan and decline in ARSB increase Wnt9A expression in NCM460 and HT-29 human colonic epithelial cells and in mouse colon is presented. Increased expression of Wnt9A has been associated with multiple malignancies, including colon carcinoma, and with ectodermal and mesoendodermal morphogenesis. When ARSB activity was reduced by siRNA or by exposure to carrageenan (1 μg/ml for 24 h), degradation of chondroitin 4-sulfate (C4S) was inhibited, leading to accumulation of more highly sulfated C4S, which binds less galectin-3, a β-galactoside-binding protein. Nuclear galectin-3 increased and mediated increased binding of Sp1 to the Sp1 consensus sequence in the Wnt9A promoter, shown by oligonucleotide-binding assay and by chromatin immunoprecipitation assay. When galectin-3 was silenced, the increases in Sp1 binding to the Wnt9A promoter and in Wnt9A expression, which followed carrageenan or ARSB silencing, were inhibited. Mithramycin A, a specific inhibitor of Sp1 oligonucleotide binding, and Sp1 siRNA blocked the carrageenan- and ARSB siRNA-induced increases in Wnt9A expression. These studies reveal how carrageenan exposure can lead to transcriptional events in colonic epithelial cells through decline in arylsulfatase B activity, with subsequent impact on C4S, galectin-3, Sp1, and Wnt9A and can exert significant effects on Wnt-initiated signaling and related vital cell processes.

Highlights

  • Mechanism by which Wnt expression was increased by carrageenan exposure was unknown

  • The Wnt9A promoter has consensus oligonucleotide binding sites for Sp1 [28], and we investigated whether carrageenan exposure and arylsulfatase B (ARSB) silencing could lead to activation of the Wnt9A promoter and increased Wnt9A expression in colonic epithelium through increased oligonucleotide binding of Sp1, mediated by galectin-3

  • The study findings have demonstrated that exposure to the common food additive carrageenan increases the mRNA expression of Wnt9A in human colonic epithelial cells and in C57BL/6J mice

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Summary

Background

Mechanism by which Wnt expression was increased by carrageenan exposure was unknown. Results: Sp1 activated Wnt9A transcription through changes in arylsulfatase B, chondroitin 4-sulfation, and galectin-3. In cultured human colonic epithelial cells and mouse colonic tissue, exposure to the common food additive carrageenan leads to inflammation, activation of Wnt signaling, increased Wnt9A expression, and decline in the activity of the enzyme arylsulfatase B (ARSB; N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase). Mithramycin A, a specific inhibitor of Sp1 oligonucleotide binding, and Sp1 siRNA blocked the carrageenanand ARSB siRNA-induced increases in Wnt9A expression These studies reveal how carrageenan exposure can lead to transcriptional events in colonic epithelial cells through decline in arylsulfatase B activity, with subsequent impact on C4S, galectin-3, Sp1, and Wnt9A and can exert significant effects on Wntinitiated signaling and related vital cell processes. The Wnt-signaling pathways are characterized as the canonical Wnt-signaling pathway, the non-canonical cell polarity pathway, and the non-canonical Wnt-calcium pathway These signaling mechanisms are activated by an extracellular Wnt protein binding with a Frizzled cell receptor, with subsequent effects on the regulation of gene transcription, the organization

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