Synthetic peptide corresponding to the extracellular domain of occludin perturbs the tight junction permeability barrier Journal Article


Authors: Wong, V.; Gumbiner, B. M.
Article Title: Synthetic peptide corresponding to the extracellular domain of occludin perturbs the tight junction permeability barrier
Abstract: Occludin, the putative tight junction integral membrane protein, is an attractive candidate for a protein that forms the actual sealing element of the tight junction. To study the role of occludin in the formation of the tight junction seal, synthetic peptides (OCC1 and OCC2) corresponding to the two putative extracellular domains of occludin were assayed for their ability to alter tight junctions in Xenopus kidney epithelial cell line A6. Transepithelial electrical resistance and paracellular tracer flux measurements indicated that the second extracellular domain peptide (OCC2) reversibly disrupted the transepithelial permeability barrier at concentrations of <5 μM. Despite the increased paracellular permeability, there were no changes in gross epithelial cell morphology as determined by scanning EM. The OCC2 peptide decreased the amount of occludin present at the tight junction, as assessed by indirect immunofluorescence, as well as decreased total cellular content of occludin, as assessed by Western blot analysis. Pulse-labeling and metabolic chase analysis suggested that this decrease in occludin level could be attributed to an increase in turnover of cellular occludin rather than a decrease in occludin synthesis. The effect on occludin was specific because other tight junction components, ZO-1, ZO-2, cingulin, and the adherens junction protein E-cadherin, were unaltered by OCC2 treatment. Therefore, the peptide corresponding to the second extracellular domain of occludin perturbs the tight junction permeability barrier in a very specific manner. The correlation between a decrease in occludin levels and the permeability barrier provides evidence for a role of occludin in the formation of the tight junction seal.
Keywords: nonhuman; protein domain; animal cell; animals; cell line; membrane proteins; animalia; tight junction; kidney; amino acid sequence; molecular sequence data; peptide fragments; membrane protein; blood brain barrier; epithelium cell; epithelium; electrophysiology; peptide synthesis; cell membrane permeability; xenopus; tissue specificity; tight junctions; kidney epithelium; microscopy, electron, scanning; phocidae; priority journal; article; basolateral membrane; muscle fibril
Journal Title: Journal of Cell Biology
Volume: 136
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0021-9525
Publisher: Rockefeller University Press  
Date Published: 1997-01-27
Start Page: 399
End Page: 409
Language: English
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.136.2.399
PUBMED: 9015310
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2134825
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 17 March 2017 -- Source: Scopus
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