Environmental stressors affect intestinal permeability and repair responses in a pig intestinal ischemia model.
Amanda L ZieglerTiffany A PridgenAnthony T BlikslagerPublished in: Tissue barriers (2020)
The pig is a powerful model for intestinal barrier studies, and it is important to carefully plan animal care and handling for optimal study design as psychological and physiological stressors significantly impact intestinal mucosal barrier function. Here, we report the effects of a period of environmental acclimation versus acute transport stress on mucosal barrier repair after intestinal ischemic injury. Jejunal ischemia was induced in young pigs which had been allowed to acclimate to a biomedical research housing environment or had been transported immediately prior to experimental injury (non-acclimated). Mucosa was then incubated ex vivo on Ussing chambers. In uninjured mucosa, there was no difference in transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) or epithelial integrity between groups. However, acclimated pigs had increased macromolecular flux as compared to non-acclimated pigs during the first hour of ex vivo incubation. Ischemia induced greater epithelial loss in non-acclimated pigs as compared to acclimated pigs, yet this group achieved greater wound healing during recovery. Non-acclimated pigs had more robust TEER recovery ex vivo following injury versus acclimated pigs. The expression pattern of the tight junction protein claudin-4 was disrupted in acclimated pigs following recovery but showed enhanced localization to the apical membrane in non-acclimated pigs following recovery. Acute transport stress increases mucosal susceptibility to epithelial loss but also primes the tissue for a more robust barrier repair response. Alternatively, environmental acclimation increases leak pathway and diminishes barrier repair responses after ischemic injury.