Lipopolysaccharide of Escherichia coli, polyamines, and acetic acid stimulate cell proliferation in intestinal epithelial cells

1999 
Our aim was to examine whether lipopolysaccharide of Escherichia coli, polyamines of dietetic and/or bacterial origin, and products of the bacterial metabolism influence cell proliferation in epithelial cells from the colon and small intestine. Lipopolysaccharide of Escherichia coli 0111:B4 was incubated with cultures from human colonic mucosa. The mitoses were arrested with Vincristine and the total number of metaphases per crypt was counted. In addition, lipopolysaccharide was incubated with a human colonic epithelial cell line from adenocarcinoma (LS-123 cells) and with a nontransformed small intestinal cell line from germ-free rats (IEC-6 cells) for 24 h. In the last 4 h, the cells were labeled with tritiated thymidine. The cells were incubated with putrescine, cadaverine, and spermidine at 10−11–10−3 M and with acetic acid (10−5–10−1 M), acetaldehyde (10−10–10−4 M) and ammonium chloride (1–20 mM). Lipopolysaccharide of Escherichia coli increased the number of arrested metaphases in human colonic crypts and DNA synthesis in L-123 and IEC-6 cells (P<0.001). All polyamines increased DNA synthesis in the colonic and small intestinal cell lines, the effects being more marked for putrescine (P<0.001). The higher concentrations of acetic acid increased DNA synthesis in both epithelial cell lines (P<0.001). Acetaldehyde slightly decreased DNA synthesis in LS-123 cells at cytotoxic concentrations. Ammonium chloride did not significantly affect DNA synthesis. The final concentration of nonionized ammonia was less than 3%. It is concluded that lipopolysaccharides of Escherichia coli and intraluminal factors derived from microorganisms increase cell proliferation in human colonic crypts and intestinal epithelial cell lines.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    32
    References
    20
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []