Abstract

Paneth cells in small intestinal crypts secrete microbicidal alpha-defensins in response to bacteria and bacterial antigens (Ayabe, T., Satchell, D. P., Wilson, C. L., Parks, W. C., Selsted, M. E., and Ouellette, A. J. (2000) Nat. Immunol. 1, 113- 38). We now report that the Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channel mIKCa1 modulates mouse Paneth cell secretion. mIKCa1 cDNA clones identified in a mouse small intestinal crypt library by hybridization to human IKCa1 cDNA probes were isolated, and DNA sequence analysis showed that they were identical to mIKCa1 cDNAs isolated from erythroid cells and liver. The genomic organization was found to be conserved between mouse and human IKCa1 as shown by comparisons of the respective cDNA and genomic sequences. Reverse transcriptase-PCR experiments using nested primers amplified mIKCa1 from the lower half of bisected crypts and from single Paneth cells, but not from the upper half of bisected crypts, villus epithelium, or undifferentiated crypt epithelial cells, suggesting a lineage-specific role for mIKCa1 in mouse small bowel epithelium. The cloned mIKCa1 channel was calcium-activated and was blocked by ten structurally diverse peptide and nonpeptide inhibitors with potencies spanning 9 orders of magnitude and indistinguishable from that of the human homologue. Consistent with channel blockade, charybdotoxin, clotrimazole, and the highly selective IKCa1 inhibitors, TRAM-34 and TRAM-39, inhibited (approximately 50%) Paneth cell secretion stimulated by bacteria or bacterial lipopolysaccharide, measured both as bactericidal activity and secreted cryptdin protein, but the inactive analog, TRAM-7, did not block secretion. These results demonstrate that mIKCa1 is modulator of Paneth cell alpha-defensin secretion and disclose an involvement in mucosal defense of the intestinal epithelium against ingested bacterial pathogens.

Highlights

  • Gene-encoded antimicrobial peptides are evolutionarily conserved molecules that all known species elaborate as components of innate immunity [1]

  • From evidence of their secretion of cryptdins in response to bacteria and bacterial antigens, Paneth cells are inferred to participate in innate immunity in the crypt microenvironment and perhaps above the crypt-villus junction as well [10, 27]

  • Carbamyl choline-induced Paneth cell secretion is associated with a biphasic increase in cytosolic [Ca2ϩ], where the first rise in Ca2ϩ derives from intracellular stores and the second is dependent on uptake of exogenous Ca2ϩ [15]

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Summary

Introduction

Gene-encoded antimicrobial peptides are evolutionarily conserved molecules that all known species elaborate as components of innate immunity [1]. MIKCa1 cDNA clones identified in a mouse small intestinal crypt library by hybridization to human IKCa1 cDNA probes were isolated, and DNA sequence analysis showed that they were identical to mIKCa1 cDNAs isolated from erythroid cells and liver.

Results
Conclusion

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