Pathways involved in gut mucosal barrier dysfunction induced in adult rats by maternal deprivation: corticotrophin-releasing factor and nerve growth factor interplay
- Frederick Barreau1,
- Christel Cartier1,
- Mathilde Leveque1,
- Laurent Ferrier1,
- Raphael Moriez1,
- Valerie Laroute2,
- Andras Rosztoczy3,
- Jean Fioramonti1 and
- Lionel Bueno1
- 1Neuro-Gastroenterology and Nutrition Unit, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Toulouse, France2Physiopathology and Toxicology Unit, Ecole Nationale Vétérinaire, Toulouse, France3Department of Internal Medicine, University of Szeged, Hungary
- Corresponding author L. Bueno: Neuro-Gastroenterology and Nutrition Unit, INRA, 180 chemin de Tournefeuille, BP.3, 31931 Toulouse Cedex 9, France. Email: lbueno{at}toulouse.inra.fr
Abstract
Neonatal maternal deprivation (NMD) increases gut paracellular permeability (GPP) through mast cells and nerve growth factor (NGF), and modifies corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF) and corticosterone levels. CRF, corticosterone and mast cells are involved in stress-induced mucosal barrier impairment. Consequently, this study aimed to specify whether corticosteronaemia and colonic expression of both preproCRF and CRF are modified by NMD, and to determine if altered expression may participate in the elevated GPP in connection with NGF and mast cells. Male Wistar rat pups were either separated from postnatal days 2–14, or left undisturbed with their dam. At 12 weeks of age, adult rats were treated with mifepristone (an antagonist of corticoid receptors), α-helical CRF(9-41) (a non-specific CRF receptor antagonist), or SSR-125543 (CRF-R1 receptor antagonist). We also determined corticosteronaemia and both colonic preproCRF and CRF expression. Then, control rats were treated by CRF, doxantrazole (mast cell stabilizer), BRX-537A (a mast cell activator) and anti-NGF antibody. NMD did not modify colonic CRF level but increased colonic preproCRF expression and corticosteronaemia. Peripheral CRF, via CRF-R1 receptor, but not corticosterone, was involved in the elevated GPP observed in these rats, through a mast-cell-mediated mechanism, since the increase of GPP induced by exogenous CRF was abolished by doxantrazole. Anti-NGF antibody treatment also reduced the elevated GPP induced by CRF or BRX-537A. CRF acts through CRF-R1 receptors to stimulate NGF release from mast cells, which participates in the elevated GPP observed in NMD adult rats. This suggests that early traumatic experience induced neuro-endocrine dysfunction, involved in alterations of gut mucosal barrier.
Footnotes
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(Resubmitted 11 September 2006; accepted after revision 18 January 2007; first published online 18 January 2007)
- 2007 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2007 The Physiological Society













