Chronic inflammation of middle ear cholesteatoma promotes its recurrence via a paracrine mechanism

BACKGROUND: Cholesteatoma disease is an expanding lesion in the middle ear. Hearing loss and facial paralysis alongside with other intracranial complications are found. No pharmaceutical treatment is available today and recurrence after surgical extraction occurs. We investigated possible TLR4-based mechanisms promoting recurrence and explore possible treatments strategies.

METHODS: We isolated fibroblasts and epidermal stem cells from cholesteatoma tissue and healthy auditory canal skin. Subsequently, their expression under standard culture conditions and after stimulation with LPS was investigated by RT-qPCR. Cell metabolism and proliferation were analysed upon LPS treatment, with and without TLR4 antagonist. An indirect co-culture of fibroblasts and epidermal stem cells isolated from cholesteatoma tissue was utilized to monitor epidermal differentiation upon LPS treatment by RT-qPCR and immunocytochemistry.

RESULTS: Under standard culture conditions, we detected a tissue-independent higher expression of IL-1β and IL-8 in stem cells, an upregulation of KGF and IGF-2 in both cell types derived from cholesteatoma and higher expression of TLR4 in stem cells derived from cholesteatoma tissue. Upon LPS challenge, we could detect a significantly higher expression of IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-6 and IL-8 in stem cells and of TNF-a, GM-CSF and CXCL-5 in stem cells and fibroblasts derived from cholesteatoma. The expression of the growth factors KGF, EGF, EREG, IGF-2 and HGF was significantly higher in fibroblasts, particularly when derived from cholesteatoma. Upon treatment with LPS the metabolism was elevated in stem cells and fibroblasts, proliferation was only enhanced in fibroblasts derived from cholesteatoma. This could be reversed by the treatment with a TLR4 antagonist. The cholesteatoma fibroblasts could be triggered by LPS to promote the epidermal differentiation of the stem cells, while no LPS treatment or LPS treatment without the presence of fibroblasts did not result in such a differentiation.

CONCLUSION: We propose that cholesteatoma recurrence is based on TLR4 signalling imprinted in the cholesteatoma cells. It induces excessive inflammation of stem cells and fibroblasts, proliferation of perimatrix fibroblasts and the generation of epidermal cells from stem cells thru paracrine signalling by fibroblasts. Treatment of the operation site with a TLR4 antagonist might reduce the chance of cholesteatoma recurrence. Video Abstract.

Medienart:

E-Artikel

Erscheinungsjahr:

2021

Erschienen:

2021

Enthalten in:

Zur Gesamtaufnahme - volume:19

Enthalten in:

Cell communication and signaling : CCS - 19(2021), 1 vom: 24. Feb., Seite 25

Sprache:

Englisch

Beteiligte Personen:

Schürmann, Matthias [VerfasserIn]
Oppel, Felix [VerfasserIn]
Shao, Senyao [VerfasserIn]
Volland-Thurn, Verena [VerfasserIn]
Kaltschmidt, Christian [VerfasserIn]
Kaltschmidt, Barbara [VerfasserIn]
Scholtz, Lars-Uwe [VerfasserIn]
Sudhoff, Holger [VerfasserIn]

Links:

Volltext

Themen:

Cholesteatoma
Cholesteatoma recurrence
Cytokines
Inflammation
Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
Journal Article
Keratins, Type II
Lipopolysaccharides
Stem cells
TLR4
TLR4 protein, human
Toll-Like Receptor 4

Anmerkungen:

Date Completed 29.12.2021

Date Revised 29.12.2021

published: Electronic

Citation Status MEDLINE

doi:

10.1186/s12964-020-00690-y

funding:

Förderinstitution / Projekttitel:

PPN (Katalog-ID):

NLM321854322