Table 5.
Vibrio cholerae[87,88] | It expresses zonula occludens toxin that reversibly increases paracellular permeability, triggering phospholipase C and protein kinase Ca dependent actin polymerization |
This process is primary or secondary related to TJ disruption | |
Shigella flexneri[89] | Secretes heat stable proteins that affect intestinal cells and lead to TJ disruption, even in the absence of living bacteria |
Clostridium perfringens[29,31,61,62] | Its enterotoxin interacts with high affinity to claudin-4, therefore also known as CPE-R |
Lower affinity receptors are claudin-3 and occludin. CPE is proposed to be a multifunctional toxin that first induces cell damage at the level of the cell membrane, and thereby relates to TJ proteins, causing structural and functional alterations[61] | |
Michl et al[31] have studied the effect of CPE on pancreatic cell cancers that expressed claudin 4[31], and they suggest that targeting of claudin-4 expressing tumors with CPE can represent a promising treatment method | |
Clostridium difficile[90] | This pathogenic microorganism, known etiologic factor of pseudomembranous colitis, secretes two toxins TcdA and TcdB that act through the Rho GTPase pathway to produce cell damage |
Study for their effect on epithelial TJ structure assumed that they lead to actin rearrangement, actin-ZO1 dissociation and dissociation of TJ components with changes of their cytoplasmic localization[90] | |
EPEC[91-93] | EPEC secretes through the type III secretion mechanism[87] the EspF protein, that is dose-dependently related to TER and epithelial barrier disruption and cytoplasmic localization of occludin[91] |
These effects seem to relate primary with phosphorylation of 20 kDa myosin light chain and cytoskeletal contraction. Occludin appears dephosphorylated on serine/threonine residues[92] | |
The pathogenic action of EPEC on the intestinal epithelium is reversed by Saccharomyces boulardii[93] |
CPE: Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin; CPE-R: Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin receptor; EPEC: Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli; TJ: Tight junction; ZO: Zonula occludens; GTPase: Guanosine triphosphatase.