Intestinal Permeability
Intestinal permeability (colloquially “leaky gut”) refers to increased passage of molecules across the intestinal epithelial barrier that would normally be excluded. The intestinal lining is a single cell layer thick — the barrier between the gut lumen (which is technically outside the body) and the bloodstream.
The Barrier
Intestinal epithelial cells (enterocytes) are connected by tight junctions — protein complexes (claudins, occludin, zonulin-regulated) that seal the spaces between cells. In a healthy gut, only selectively transported molecules cross the barrier. In increased permeability, the tight junctions loosen, allowing larger molecules — partially digested food proteins, bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), bacterial metabolites — to cross into the lamina propria (the tissue layer beneath the epithelium), where they encounter immune cells including Mast Cells.
The Mast Cell Feedback Loop
- Mast Cells in the gut wall degranulate → Tryptase activates PAR-2 on epithelial cells → tight junctions loosen → permeability increases
- Increased permeability → more foreign molecules cross the barrier → more immune activation → more mast cell triggering
- More mast cell activation → more mediator release → more epithelial damage → more permeability
This is a self-perpetuating cycle. Mast cell activation both causes and is worsened by intestinal permeability.
Why It Matters
Increased permeability means:
- Dietary Histamine may be absorbed more readily (bypassing DAO in the epithelial layer)
- Bacterial products (LPS) entering the lamina propria activate mast cells via Toll-like receptors (see Non-IgE Activation Pathways)
- Food proteins that would normally be fully digested before absorption instead cross partially intact, potentially triggering immune responses
- DAO production is reduced because the enterocytes that produce it are damaged
This is why gut healing is described as foundational rather than optional in mast cell management. A permeable gut means more triggers entering the system continuously. See The Gut-Brain-Mast Cell Axis.
What Damages the Barrier
- Mast cell activation itself (the loop above)
- NSAIDs (directly damage the epithelial lining AND inhibit DAO)
- Alcohol
- Chronic stress (CRH increases permeability independently of mast cells)
- Dysbiosis (loss of protective microbial metabolites like butyrate)
- Infections
- Gluten (in susceptible individuals, via zonulin pathway)