Mucosal cytokine imbalance in irritable bowel syndrome

Typeset version

 

TY  - JOUR
  - MacSharry, J.,O'Mahony, L.,Fanning, A.,Bairead, E.,Sherlock, G.,Tiesman, J.,Fulmer, A.,Kiely, B.,Dinan, T.,Shanahan, F.,Quigley, E.
  - 2008
  - Unknown
  - Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology
  - Mucosal cytokine imbalance in irritable bowel syndrome
  - Validated
  - ()
  - 43
  - 12
  - 1467
  - 1476
  - Objective. To systematically examine mucosal biopsies for differences in cytokine gene expression and protein secretion. Material and methods. The study included 59 females with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and 39, otherwise healthy, female volunteers presenting for colonoscopy. Colonic biopsies from subsets were studied by microarray analysis (IBS, n=9; controls, n=8), quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) (IBS, n=22; controls, n=21), and ex vivo biopsy culture (IBS, n=28, controls, n=10). Biopsies from patients with active colitis were used as inflammatory disease controls. Results. While gene array analysis revealed extensive overlapping between controls and IBS patients, reduced expression of genes linked to chemokine function was evident among the IBS patients alone. Differential expression was confirmed by qRT-PCR or ex vivo biopsy culture for 5 out of 6 selected genes. Reduced secretion of chemokines (IL-8, CXCL-9 and MCP-1) but not pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-, IL-6 and IL-1) was established on the basis of the ex vivo biopsy cultures. These findings were in marked contrast to the IBD patients who demonstrated increased production of both chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Conclusions. Despite the expected heterogeneity of the disorder, differences in mucosal chemokine signalling were evident in this cross-sectional study of IBS patients at the level of both gene expression and protein secretion, with IBS patients demonstrating a consistent deficit in the expression and secretion of chemokines known to play a critical role in mucosal defence.Objective. To systematically examine mucosal biopsies for differences in cytokine gene expression and protein secretion. Material and methods. The study included 59 females with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and 39, otherwise healthy, female volunteers presenting for colonoscopy. Colonic biopsies from subsets were studied by microarray analysis (IBS, n=9; controls, n=8), quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) (IBS, n=22; controls, n=21), and ex vivo biopsy culture (IBS, n=28, controls, n=10). Biopsies from patients with active colitis were used as inflammatory disease controls. Results. While gene array analysis revealed extensive overlapping between controls and IBS patients, reduced expression of genes linked to chemokine function was evident among the IBS patients alone. Differential expression was confirmed by qRT-PCR or ex vivo biopsy culture for 5 out of 6 selected genes. Reduced secretion of chemokines (IL-8, CXCL-9 and MCP-1) but not pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-, IL-6 and IL-1) was established on the basis of the ex vivo biopsy cultures. These findings were in marked contrast to the IBD patients who demonstrated increased production of both chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Conclusions. Despite the expected heterogeneity of the disorder, differences in mucosal chemokine signalling were evident in this cross-sectional study of IBS patients at the level of both gene expression and protein secretion, with IBS patients demonstrating a consistent deficit in the expression and secretion of chemokines known to play a critical role in mucosal defence.
  - 0036-55210036-5521
  - ://WOS:000261174700010://WOS:000261174700010
DA  - 2008/NaN
ER  - 
@article{V235379235,
   = {MacSharry,  J. and O'Mahony,  L. and Fanning,  A. and Bairead,  E. and Sherlock,  G. and Tiesman,  J. and Fulmer,  A. and Kiely,  B. and Dinan,  T. and Shanahan,  F. and Quigley,  E. },
   = {2008},
   = {Unknown},
   = {Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology},
   = {Mucosal cytokine imbalance in irritable bowel syndrome},
   = {Validated},
   = {()},
   = {43},
   = {12},
  pages = {1467--1476},
   = {{Objective. To systematically examine mucosal biopsies for differences in cytokine gene expression and protein secretion. Material and methods. The study included 59 females with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and 39, otherwise healthy, female volunteers presenting for colonoscopy. Colonic biopsies from subsets were studied by microarray analysis (IBS, n=9; controls, n=8), quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) (IBS, n=22; controls, n=21), and ex vivo biopsy culture (IBS, n=28, controls, n=10). Biopsies from patients with active colitis were used as inflammatory disease controls. Results. While gene array analysis revealed extensive overlapping between controls and IBS patients, reduced expression of genes linked to chemokine function was evident among the IBS patients alone. Differential expression was confirmed by qRT-PCR or ex vivo biopsy culture for 5 out of 6 selected genes. Reduced secretion of chemokines (IL-8, CXCL-9 and MCP-1) but not pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-, IL-6 and IL-1) was established on the basis of the ex vivo biopsy cultures. These findings were in marked contrast to the IBD patients who demonstrated increased production of both chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Conclusions. Despite the expected heterogeneity of the disorder, differences in mucosal chemokine signalling were evident in this cross-sectional study of IBS patients at the level of both gene expression and protein secretion, with IBS patients demonstrating a consistent deficit in the expression and secretion of chemokines known to play a critical role in mucosal defence.Objective. To systematically examine mucosal biopsies for differences in cytokine gene expression and protein secretion. Material and methods. The study included 59 females with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and 39, otherwise healthy, female volunteers presenting for colonoscopy. Colonic biopsies from subsets were studied by microarray analysis (IBS, n=9; controls, n=8), quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) (IBS, n=22; controls, n=21), and ex vivo biopsy culture (IBS, n=28, controls, n=10). Biopsies from patients with active colitis were used as inflammatory disease controls. Results. While gene array analysis revealed extensive overlapping between controls and IBS patients, reduced expression of genes linked to chemokine function was evident among the IBS patients alone. Differential expression was confirmed by qRT-PCR or ex vivo biopsy culture for 5 out of 6 selected genes. Reduced secretion of chemokines (IL-8, CXCL-9 and MCP-1) but not pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-, IL-6 and IL-1) was established on the basis of the ex vivo biopsy cultures. These findings were in marked contrast to the IBD patients who demonstrated increased production of both chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Conclusions. Despite the expected heterogeneity of the disorder, differences in mucosal chemokine signalling were evident in this cross-sectional study of IBS patients at the level of both gene expression and protein secretion, with IBS patients demonstrating a consistent deficit in the expression and secretion of chemokines known to play a critical role in mucosal defence.}},
  issn = {0036-55210036-5521},
   = {://WOS:000261174700010://WOS:000261174700010},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSMacSharry, J.,O'Mahony, L.,Fanning, A.,Bairead, E.,Sherlock, G.,Tiesman, J.,Fulmer, A.,Kiely, B.,Dinan, T.,Shanahan, F.,Quigley, E.
YEAR2008
MONTHUnknown
JOURNAL_CODEScandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology
TITLEMucosal cytokine imbalance in irritable bowel syndrome
STATUSValidated
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORD
VOLUME43
ISSUE12
START_PAGE1467
END_PAGE1476
ABSTRACTObjective. To systematically examine mucosal biopsies for differences in cytokine gene expression and protein secretion. Material and methods. The study included 59 females with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and 39, otherwise healthy, female volunteers presenting for colonoscopy. Colonic biopsies from subsets were studied by microarray analysis (IBS, n=9; controls, n=8), quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) (IBS, n=22; controls, n=21), and ex vivo biopsy culture (IBS, n=28, controls, n=10). Biopsies from patients with active colitis were used as inflammatory disease controls. Results. While gene array analysis revealed extensive overlapping between controls and IBS patients, reduced expression of genes linked to chemokine function was evident among the IBS patients alone. Differential expression was confirmed by qRT-PCR or ex vivo biopsy culture for 5 out of 6 selected genes. Reduced secretion of chemokines (IL-8, CXCL-9 and MCP-1) but not pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-, IL-6 and IL-1) was established on the basis of the ex vivo biopsy cultures. These findings were in marked contrast to the IBD patients who demonstrated increased production of both chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Conclusions. Despite the expected heterogeneity of the disorder, differences in mucosal chemokine signalling were evident in this cross-sectional study of IBS patients at the level of both gene expression and protein secretion, with IBS patients demonstrating a consistent deficit in the expression and secretion of chemokines known to play a critical role in mucosal defence.Objective. To systematically examine mucosal biopsies for differences in cytokine gene expression and protein secretion. Material and methods. The study included 59 females with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and 39, otherwise healthy, female volunteers presenting for colonoscopy. Colonic biopsies from subsets were studied by microarray analysis (IBS, n=9; controls, n=8), quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) (IBS, n=22; controls, n=21), and ex vivo biopsy culture (IBS, n=28, controls, n=10). Biopsies from patients with active colitis were used as inflammatory disease controls. Results. While gene array analysis revealed extensive overlapping between controls and IBS patients, reduced expression of genes linked to chemokine function was evident among the IBS patients alone. Differential expression was confirmed by qRT-PCR or ex vivo biopsy culture for 5 out of 6 selected genes. Reduced secretion of chemokines (IL-8, CXCL-9 and MCP-1) but not pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-, IL-6 and IL-1) was established on the basis of the ex vivo biopsy cultures. These findings were in marked contrast to the IBD patients who demonstrated increased production of both chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Conclusions. Despite the expected heterogeneity of the disorder, differences in mucosal chemokine signalling were evident in this cross-sectional study of IBS patients at the level of both gene expression and protein secretion, with IBS patients demonstrating a consistent deficit in the expression and secretion of chemokines known to play a critical role in mucosal defence.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN0036-55210036-5521
EDITION
URL://WOS:000261174700010://WOS:000261174700010
DOI_LINK
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS