From diverticulosis to complicated diverticular disease: Progression of myogenic alterations and oxidative imbalance

Author:

Pallotta Lucia1,Pisano Annalinda2,Vona Rosa3,Cappelletti Martina1ORCID,Pignataro Maria Gemma2,Tattoli Ivan1,Maselli Maria Antonietta4,Tarallo Mariarita5,Casella Giovanni5,Caronna Roberto5,Tancredi Andrea6,Scotti Giorgia Burrelli5,Scalese Giulia1,Matarrese Paola3,Giordano Carla2ORCID,Severi Carola1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Translational and Precision Medicine Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

2. Department of Radiological, Oncological and Pathological Sciences Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

3. Center for Gender‐Specific Medicine Italian National Institute of Health Rome Italy

4. Experimental Pharmacology Laboratory National Institute of Gastroenterology “S. de Bellis”, Research Hospital Castellana Grotte Bari Italy

5. Department of Surgical Science Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

6. Department of Methods and Models for Economy, Territory and Finance Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe natural history and pathophysiology of diverticular disease (DD) are still uncertain. An ex‐vivo human complicated DD (cDD) model has recently shown a predominant transmural oxidative imbalance. The present study aims to evaluate whether the previously described alterations may precede the symptomatic form of the disease.MethodsColonic surgical samples obtained from patients with asymptomatic diverticulosis (DIV), complicated DD, and controls were systematically and detailed morphologically and molecularly analyzed. Therefore, histologic, histomorphometric, immunohistochemical evaluation, and gene and protein expression analysis were performed to characterize colonic muscle changes and evaluate chronic inflammation, oxidative imbalance, and hypoxia. Functional muscle activity was tested on strips and isolated cells in response to contractile and relaxant agents.Key ResultsCompared with controls, DD showed a marketed increase in muscle layer thickness, smooth muscle cell syncytium disarray, and increased interstitial fibrosis; moreover, the observed features were more evident in the cDD group. These changes mainly affected longitudinal muscle and were associated with altered contraction‐relaxation dynamics and fibrogenic switch of smooth muscle cells. Chronic lymphoplasmacytic inflammation was primarily evident in the mucosa and spared the muscle. A transmural increase in carbonylated and nitrated proteins, with loss of antioxidant molecules, characterized both stages of DD, suggesting early oxidative stress probably triggered by recurrent ischemic events, more pronounced in cDD, where HIF‐1 was detected in both muscle and mucosa.Conclusion & InferencesThe different DD clinical scenarios are part of a progressive process, with oxidative imbalance representing a new target in the management of DD.

Funder

Sapienza Università di Roma

Publisher

Wiley

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. The Unexplored Role of Mitochondria-Related Oxidative Stress in Diverticular Disease;International Journal of Molecular Sciences;2024-09-06

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