A230 DEATH, MITOCHONDRIA, AND INFLAMMATION IN E. COLI-LF82 INFECTION
A Mohan, A Wang, D McKay, T E Shutt

TL;DR
This study explores how a Crohn’s disease-related E. coli strain affects mitochondria, cell death, and inflammation in colon cells over time.
Contribution
The study reveals the sequence of mitochondrial disruption, mtDNA release, and inflammatory gene activation during AIEC-LF82 infection.
Findings
E. coli-LF82 causes mitochondrial fragmentation in epithelial cells within 6 hours.
Cell death begins at 9 hours post-infection, following mtDNA release and inflammation.
Inflammatory cytokines like CXCL10 and IL-6 are transcribed at 8 hours after infection.
Abstract
The Crohn’s disease-associated adherent invasive E. coli (AIEC) (strain LF82) decreases mitochondrial membrane potential and fragments the epithelial mitochondrial network. Other groups have also reported activation of NF-κB-mediated inflammation and generation of reactive oxygen species in AIEC-LF82 infected epithelia. It remains unclear how these findings integrate over the course of AIEC-LF82 infection and how they influence each other over the course of infection. To characterize the sequence of events following AIEC-LF82 infection in a non-cancer derived epithelial cell model focusing on mitochondrial disruption, cell death, mtDNA release, and inflammatory gene expression. The fetal derived human colon epithelial cell line (FHC) were infected with E. coli-LF82 or the commensal E. coli-HB101 at multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 100 or uninfected over the course of various…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeutrophil, Myeloperoxidase and Oxidative Mechanisms
