PPARalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression.

Background The selective absorption of nutrients and other food constituents in the small intestine is mediated by a group of transport proteins and metabolic enzymes, often collectively called 'intestinal barrier proteins'. An important receptor that mediates the effects of dietary lipids on gene expression is the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR¿), which is abundantly expressed in enterocytes. In this study we examined the effects of acute nutritional activation of PPAR¿ on expression of genes encoding intestinal barrier proteins. To this end we used triacylglycerols composed of identical fatty acids in combination with gene expression profiling in wild-type and PPAR¿-null mice. Treatment with the synthetic PPAR¿ agonist WY14643 served as reference. Results We identified 74 barrier genes that were PPAR¿-dependently regulated 6 hours after activation with WY14643. For eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and oleic acid (OA) these numbers were 46, 41, and 19, respectively. The overlap between EPA-, DHA-, and WY14643-regulated genes was considerable, whereas OA treatment showed limited overlap. Functional implications inferred form our data suggested that nutrient-activated PPAR¿ regulated transporters and phase I/II metabolic enzymes were involved in a) fatty acid oxidation, b) cholesterol, glucose, and amino acid transport and metabolism, c) intestinal motility, and d) oxidative stress defense. Conclusion We identified intestinal barrier genes that were PPAR¿-dependently regulated after acute activation by fatty acids. This knowledge provides a better understanding of the impact dietary fat has on the barrier function of the gut, identifies PPAR¿ as an important factor controlling this key function, and underscores the importance of PPAR¿ for nutrient-mediated gene regulation in intestine.

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Main Authors: van den Bosch, H.M., Bünger, M., de Groot, P.J., Bosch-Vermeulen, H., Hooiveld, G.J.E.J., Müller, M.R.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:amino-acid transporters, cholesterol absorption, coupled transporters, fatty-acids, murine small-intestine, peroxisome proliferators, ppar-alpha-activation, proliferator-activated receptors, target genes, ulcerative-colitis,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/pparalpha-mediated-effects-of-dietary-lipids-on-intestinal-barrie
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3726062024-12-05 van den Bosch, H.M. Bünger, M. de Groot, P.J. Bosch-Vermeulen, H. Hooiveld, G.J.E.J. Müller, M.R. Article/Letter to editor BMC Genomics 9 (2008) ISSN: 1471-2164 PPARalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression. 2008 Background The selective absorption of nutrients and other food constituents in the small intestine is mediated by a group of transport proteins and metabolic enzymes, often collectively called 'intestinal barrier proteins'. An important receptor that mediates the effects of dietary lipids on gene expression is the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR¿), which is abundantly expressed in enterocytes. In this study we examined the effects of acute nutritional activation of PPAR¿ on expression of genes encoding intestinal barrier proteins. To this end we used triacylglycerols composed of identical fatty acids in combination with gene expression profiling in wild-type and PPAR¿-null mice. Treatment with the synthetic PPAR¿ agonist WY14643 served as reference. Results We identified 74 barrier genes that were PPAR¿-dependently regulated 6 hours after activation with WY14643. For eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and oleic acid (OA) these numbers were 46, 41, and 19, respectively. The overlap between EPA-, DHA-, and WY14643-regulated genes was considerable, whereas OA treatment showed limited overlap. Functional implications inferred form our data suggested that nutrient-activated PPAR¿ regulated transporters and phase I/II metabolic enzymes were involved in a) fatty acid oxidation, b) cholesterol, glucose, and amino acid transport and metabolism, c) intestinal motility, and d) oxidative stress defense. Conclusion We identified intestinal barrier genes that were PPAR¿-dependently regulated after acute activation by fatty acids. This knowledge provides a better understanding of the impact dietary fat has on the barrier function of the gut, identifies PPAR¿ as an important factor controlling this key function, and underscores the importance of PPAR¿ for nutrient-mediated gene regulation in intestine. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/pparalpha-mediated-effects-of-dietary-lipids-on-intestinal-barrie 10.1186/1471-2164-9-231 https://edepot.wur.nl/20439 amino-acid transporters cholesterol absorption coupled transporters fatty-acids murine small-intestine peroxisome proliferators ppar-alpha-activation proliferator-activated receptors target genes ulcerative-colitis Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
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tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic amino-acid transporters
cholesterol absorption
coupled transporters
fatty-acids
murine small-intestine
peroxisome proliferators
ppar-alpha-activation
proliferator-activated receptors
target genes
ulcerative-colitis
amino-acid transporters
cholesterol absorption
coupled transporters
fatty-acids
murine small-intestine
peroxisome proliferators
ppar-alpha-activation
proliferator-activated receptors
target genes
ulcerative-colitis
spellingShingle amino-acid transporters
cholesterol absorption
coupled transporters
fatty-acids
murine small-intestine
peroxisome proliferators
ppar-alpha-activation
proliferator-activated receptors
target genes
ulcerative-colitis
amino-acid transporters
cholesterol absorption
coupled transporters
fatty-acids
murine small-intestine
peroxisome proliferators
ppar-alpha-activation
proliferator-activated receptors
target genes
ulcerative-colitis
van den Bosch, H.M.
Bünger, M.
de Groot, P.J.
Bosch-Vermeulen, H.
Hooiveld, G.J.E.J.
Müller, M.R.
PPARalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression.
description Background The selective absorption of nutrients and other food constituents in the small intestine is mediated by a group of transport proteins and metabolic enzymes, often collectively called 'intestinal barrier proteins'. An important receptor that mediates the effects of dietary lipids on gene expression is the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR¿), which is abundantly expressed in enterocytes. In this study we examined the effects of acute nutritional activation of PPAR¿ on expression of genes encoding intestinal barrier proteins. To this end we used triacylglycerols composed of identical fatty acids in combination with gene expression profiling in wild-type and PPAR¿-null mice. Treatment with the synthetic PPAR¿ agonist WY14643 served as reference. Results We identified 74 barrier genes that were PPAR¿-dependently regulated 6 hours after activation with WY14643. For eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and oleic acid (OA) these numbers were 46, 41, and 19, respectively. The overlap between EPA-, DHA-, and WY14643-regulated genes was considerable, whereas OA treatment showed limited overlap. Functional implications inferred form our data suggested that nutrient-activated PPAR¿ regulated transporters and phase I/II metabolic enzymes were involved in a) fatty acid oxidation, b) cholesterol, glucose, and amino acid transport and metabolism, c) intestinal motility, and d) oxidative stress defense. Conclusion We identified intestinal barrier genes that were PPAR¿-dependently regulated after acute activation by fatty acids. This knowledge provides a better understanding of the impact dietary fat has on the barrier function of the gut, identifies PPAR¿ as an important factor controlling this key function, and underscores the importance of PPAR¿ for nutrient-mediated gene regulation in intestine.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet amino-acid transporters
cholesterol absorption
coupled transporters
fatty-acids
murine small-intestine
peroxisome proliferators
ppar-alpha-activation
proliferator-activated receptors
target genes
ulcerative-colitis
author van den Bosch, H.M.
Bünger, M.
de Groot, P.J.
Bosch-Vermeulen, H.
Hooiveld, G.J.E.J.
Müller, M.R.
author_facet van den Bosch, H.M.
Bünger, M.
de Groot, P.J.
Bosch-Vermeulen, H.
Hooiveld, G.J.E.J.
Müller, M.R.
author_sort van den Bosch, H.M.
title PPARalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression.
title_short PPARalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression.
title_full PPARalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression.
title_fullStr PPARalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression.
title_full_unstemmed PPARalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression.
title_sort pparalpha-mediated effects of dietary lipids on intestinal barrier gene expression.
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/pparalpha-mediated-effects-of-dietary-lipids-on-intestinal-barrie
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