Eric A F Van Tol
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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Featured researches published by Eric A F Van Tol.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 1999
Eric A F Van Tol; Lisa Holt; Feng Ling Li; Feng Ming Kong; Richard A. Rippe; Mitsuo Yamauchi; Jolanta B. Pucilowska; P. Kay Lund; R. Balfour Sartor
Normal luminal bacteria and bacterial cell wall polymers are implicated in the pathogenesis of chronic intestinal inflammation. To determine the direct involvement of bacteria and their products on intestinal fibrogenesis, the effects of purified bacterial cell wall polymers on collagen and cytokine synthesis were evaluated in intestinal myofibroblast cultures established from normal fetal and chronically inflamed cecal tissues. In this study, the intestines of Lewis rats were intramurally injected with peptidoglycan-polysaccharide polymers. Collagen and transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta1 mRNA levels were measured and correlated with mesenchymal cell accumulation by immunohistochemistry. The direct effects of cell wall polymers on fibrogenic cytokine and collagen alpha1 (type I) expression were evaluated in intestinal myofibroblast cultures. We found that intramural injections of bacterial cell wall polymers induced chronic granulomatous enterocolitis with markedly increased collagen synthesis and concomitant increased TGF-beta1 and interleukin (IL)-6 expression. Intestinal myofibroblast cultures were established, which both phenotypically and functionally resemble the mesenchymal cells that are involved in fibrosis in vivo. Bacterial cell wall polymers directly stimulated collagen alpha1 (I), TGF-beta1, IL-1beta, and IL-6 mRNA expression in the intestinal myofibroblasts derived from both normal and inflamed cecum. Neutralization of endogenous TGF-beta1 inhibited in vitro collagen gene expression. From our results, we conclude that increased exposure to luminal bacterial products can directly activate intestinal mesenchymal cells, which accumulate in areas of chronic intestinal inflammation, thus stimulating intestinal fibrosis in genetically susceptible hosts.
Baillière's clinical rheumatology | 1996
R. Balfour Sartor; Heiko C. Rath; Steven N. Lichtman; Eric A F Van Tol
Recent rodent models have been exploited to explore mechanisms of intestinal and joint inflammation. HLA-B27 transgenic rats develop colitis, gastritis, and arthritis when raised in a conventional environment, but have no evidence of inflammation under germfree (sterile) conditions. Metronidazole treatment attenuates gastrointestinal inflammation, suggesting that anaerobic bacteria are important. Experimental bacterial over-growth of predominantly anaerobic bacteria reactivates arthritis in Lewis rats which have been previously injected intra-articularly with bacterial cell wall polymers. Reactivation arthritis is mediated by interleukin-1, tumour necrosis factor-alpha, and can be blocked by metronidazole. Intramural injection of the bacterial cell wall polymer, peptidoglycan-polysaccharide, leads to biphasic, chronic granulomatous enterocolitis and peripheral arthritis in Lewis rats, but only transient intestinal inflammation and no arthritis in Buffalo or MHC-matched Fischer rats. Chronic granulomatous inflammation is mediated by T lymphocytes and interleukin-1 and is dependent on persistent antigenic stimulation by poorly biodegradable bacterial polymers. Results in these models firmly incriminate resident normal enteric flora (especially anaerobes), bacterial products, and host genetic susceptibility in the pathogenesis of spondyloarthropathies. We suggest that increased uptake of luminal bacterial components across the inflamed mucosa leads to systemic distribution of these arthropathic products. The genetically susceptible host develops reactive arthritis due to defective downregulation of inflammation in response to immunologically active bacterial components.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 1998
Antoni Stadnicki; Julie Chao; Iwona Stadnicka; Eric A F Van Tol; Kuei-Fu Lin; Fengling Li; R. Balfour Sartor; Robert W. Colman
The plasma kallikrein-kinin system is a mediator of intestinal inflammation induced by peptidoglycan-polysaccharide from group A streptococci (PG-APS) in rats. In this study we investigated the participation of intestinal tissue kallikrein (ITK). Lewis rats were injected intramurally with PG-APS. ITK was visualized by immunohistochemical staining. Cecal ITK concentration was measured by radioimmunoassay, and gene expression was evaluated by RNase protection assay. Kallikrein-binding protein (KBP) was evaluated in plasma by ELISA. Tissue kallikrein was identified in cecal goblet cells in both control and PG-APS-injected rats and in macrophages forming granulomas in inflamed tissues. Cecal ITK was significantly lower in acute and chronic phases of inflammation and in supernatant from in vitro cultures of inflamed cecum. ITK mRNA levels were not significantly different. Plasma KBP levels were significantly reduced in inflamed rats. The presence of tissue kallikrein in macrophages suggests participation in experimental colitis. The decrease of ITK in the inflamed intestine associated with unchanged mRNA levels suggests ITK release during intestinal inflammation.The plasma kallikrein-kinin system is a mediator of intestinal inflammation induced by peptidoglycan-polysaccharide from group A streptococci (PG-APS) in rats. In this study we investigated the participation of intestinal tissue kallikrein (ITK). Lewis rats were injected intramurally with PG-APS. ITK was visualized by immunohistochemical staining. Cecal ITK concentration was measured by radioimmunoassay, and gene expression was evaluated by RNase protection assay. Kallikrein-binding protein (KBP) was evaluated in plasma by ELISA. Tissue kallikrein was identified in cecal goblet cells in both control and PG-APS-injected rats and in macrophages forming granulomas in inflamed tissues. Cecal ITK was significantly lower in acute and chronic phases of inflammation and in supernatant from in vitro cultures of inflamed cecum. ITK mRNA levels were not significantly different. Plasma KBP levels were significantly reduced in inflamed rats. The presence of tissue kallikrein in macrophages suggests participation in experimental colitis. The decrease of ITK in the inflamed intestine associated with unchanged mRNA levels suggests ITK release during intestinal inflammation.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2016
Ronald Schilderink; Caroline Verseijden; Jurgen Seppen; Vanesa Muncan; Gijs R. van den Brink; Tim T. Lambers; Eric A F Van Tol; Wouter J. de Jonge
In the intestinal mucosa, retinoic acid (RA) is a critical signaling molecule. RA is derived from dietary vitamin A (retinol) through conversion by aldehyde dehydrogenases (aldh). Reduced levels of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) are associated with pathological microbial dysbiosis, inflammatory disease, and allergy. We hypothesized that SCFAs contribute to mucosal homeostasis by enhancing RA production in intestinal epithelia. With the use of human and mouse epithelial cell lines and primary enteroids, we studied the effect of SCFAs on the production of RA. Functional RA conversion was analyzed by Adlefluor activity assays. Butyrate (0-20 mM), in contrast to other SCFAs, dose dependently induced aldh1a1 or aldh1a3 transcript expression and increased RA conversion in human and mouse epithelial cells. Epithelial cell line data were replicated in intestinal organoids. In these organoids, butyrate (2-5 mM) upregulated aldh1a3 expression (36-fold over control), whereas aldh1a1 was not significantly affected. Butyrate enhanced maturation markers (Mucin-2 and villin) but did not consistently affect stemness markers or other Wnt target genes (lgr5, olfm4, ascl2, cdkn1). In enteroids, the stimulation of RA production by SCFA was mimicked by inhibitors of histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC3) but not by HDAC1/2 inhibitors nor by agonists of butyrate receptors G-protein-coupled receptor (GPR)43 or GPR109A, indicating that butyrate stimulates RA production via HDAC3 inhibition. We conclude that the SCFA butyrate inhibits HDAC3 and thereby supports epithelial RA production.
Methods | 1996
R. Balfour Sartor; Hans H. Herfarth; Eric A F Van Tol
Archive | 2014
Dirk Hondmann; Eric A F Van Tol; Gabriele Gross; Marieke H. Schoemaker; Teartse Tim Lambers
Archive | 2014
Dirk Hondmann; Eric A F Van Tol; Gabriele Gross; Marieke H. Schoemaker; Teartse Tim Lambers
Archive | 2014
Dirk Hondmann; Eric A F Van Tol; Gabriele Gross; Marieke H. Schoemaker; Teartse Tim Lambers
Archive | 2014
Dirk Hondmann; Eric A F Van Tol; Gabriele Gross; Marieke H. Schoemaker; Teartse Tim Lambers; Tania Ramacho; Manuela Elsen; Jürgen Eckel
Food & Function | 2018
Liufeng Mao; Jiwen Lei; Marieke H. Schoemaker; Bingxiu Ma; Yan Zhong; Tim T. Lambers; Eric A F Van Tol; Yulai Zhou; Tao Nie; Donghai Wu