Abstract
Nutritional deficiency and stress can severely impair intestinal architecture, integrity and host immune defense, leading to increased susceptibility to infection and cancer. Although the intestine has an inherent capability to adapt to environmental stress, the molecular mechanisms by which the intestine senses and responds to malnutrition are not completely understood. We hereby report that intestinal cell kinase (ICK), a highly conserved serine/threonine protein kinase, is a novel component of the adaptive cell signaling responses to protein malnutrition in murine small intestine. Using an experimental mouse model, we demonstrated that intestinal ICK protein level was markedly and transiently elevated upon protein deprivation, concomitant with activation of prominent pro-proliferation and pro-survival pathways of Wnt/β-catenin, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and protein kinase B (PKB/Akt) as well as increased expression of intestinal stem cell markers. Using the human ileocecal epithelial cell line HCT-8 as an in vitro model, we further demonstrated that serum starvation was able to induce up-regulation of ICK protein in intestinal epithelial cells in a reversible manner, and that serum albumin partially contributed to this effect. Knockdown of ICK expression in HCT-8 cells significantly impaired cell proliferation and down-regulated active β-catenin signal. Furthermore, reduced ICK expression in HCT-8 cells induced apoptosis through a caspase-dependent mechanism. Taken together, our findings suggest that increased ICK expression/activity in response to protein deprivation likely provides a novel protective mechanism to limit apoptosis and support compensatory mucosal growth under nutritional stress.
Highlights
Intestinal luminal nutrients constitute the primary stimulus for intestinal growth
By knocking down intestinal cell kinase (ICK) expression in vitro using lentiviral short-hairpin RNA interference, we demonstrated that ICK signaling is important for intestinal cell proliferation and survival through b-catenin-mediated and caspase-dependent pathways, respectively
These results suggest that intestinal epithelial cells may up-regulate ICK signaling pathway as a protective mechanism to limit apoptosis and promote compensatory growth during intestinal adaptation to protein malnutrition
Summary
Intestinal luminal nutrients constitute the primary stimulus for intestinal growth. Intra-lumen food is capable of stimulating gut mucosal growth either directly through local effect at the site of absorption or indirectly by regulating the release of gut hormones that are important for mucosal growth and repair [1,2]. Starvation is able to cause mucosal atrophy in the small intestine, characterized by diminished intestinal functions as well as altered morphological structures including decreased villous height, crypt depth, surface area, and epithelial cell numbers [3,4]. In response to a nutrient challenge, the small intestine exhibits a remarkable capacity of mucosal adaptation to prevent atrophy and maintain normal mucosal architecture and functions. Very little is known about the molecular basis underlying the intestinal cellular responses to nutritional stress. Major signaling pathways such as Wnt/b-catenin [5], PI3K/Akt [6], mTOR/S6K1 [7], and MAPKs [8] govern intestinal cell growth, differentiation, migration and survival in the intestinal mucosa. An intriguing question that has not been fully addressed is whether and how these crucial signaling cascades respond to nutritional deficiency
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