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result(s) for
"Bon-Frauches, Ana Carina"
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The enteric nervous system in gastrointestinal disease etiology
2021
A highly conserved but convoluted network of neurons and glial cells, the enteric nervous system (ENS), is positioned along the wall of the gut to coordinate digestive processes and gastrointestinal homeostasis. Because ENS components are in charge of the autonomous regulation of gut function, it is inevitable that their dysfunction is central to the pathophysiology and symptom generation of gastrointestinal disease. While for neurodevelopmental disorders such as Hirschsprung, ENS pathogenesis appears to be clear-cut, the role for impaired ENS activity in the etiology of other gastrointestinal disorders is less established and is often deemed secondary to other insults like intestinal inflammation. However, mounting experimental evidence in recent years indicates that gastrointestinal homeostasis hinges on multifaceted connections between the ENS, and other cellular networks such as the intestinal epithelium, the immune system, and the intestinal microbiome. Derangement of these interactions could underlie gastrointestinal disease onset and elicit variable degrees of abnormal gut function, pinpointing, perhaps unexpectedly, the ENS as a diligent participant in idiopathic but also in inflammatory and cancerous diseases of the gut. In this review, we discuss the latest evidence on the role of the ENS in the pathogenesis of enteric neuropathies, disorders of gut–brain interaction, inflammatory bowel diseases, and colorectal cancer.
Journal Article
Neuronal programming by microbiota regulates intestinal physiology
2020
Neural control of the function of visceral organs is essential for homeostasis and health. Intestinal peristalsis is critical for digestive physiology and host defence, and is often dysregulated in gastrointestinal disorders
1
. Luminal factors, such as diet and microbiota, regulate neurogenic programs of gut motility
2
–
5
, but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Here we show that the transcription factor aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) functions as a biosensor in intestinal neural circuits, linking their functional output to the microbial environment of the gut lumen. Using nuclear RNA sequencing of mouse enteric neurons that represent distinct intestinal segments and microbiota states, we demonstrate that the intrinsic neural networks of the colon exhibit unique transcriptional profiles that are controlled by the combined effects of host genetic programs and microbial colonization. Microbiota-induced expression of AHR in neurons of the distal gastrointestinal tract enables these neurons to respond to the luminal environment and to induce expression of neuron-specific effector mechanisms. Neuron-specific deletion of
Ahr
, or constitutive overexpression of its negative feedback regulator CYP1A1, results in reduced peristaltic activity of the colon, similar to that observed in microbiota-depleted mice. Finally, expression of
Ahr
in the enteric neurons of mice treated with antibiotics partially restores intestinal motility. Together, our experiments identify AHR signalling in enteric neurons as a regulatory node that integrates the luminal environment with the physiological output of intestinal neural circuits to maintain gut homeostasis and health.
In a mouse model, aryl hydrocarbon receptor signalling in enteric neurons is revealed as a mechanism that helps to maintain gut homeostasis by integrating the luminal environment with the physiology of intestinal neural circuits.
Journal Article
A branching model of lineage differentiation underpinning the neurogenic potential of enteric glia
2023
Glial cells have been proposed as a source of neural progenitors, but the mechanisms underpinning the neurogenic potential of adult glia are not known. Using single cell transcriptomic profiling, we show that enteric glial cells represent a cell state attained by autonomic neural crest cells as they transition along a linear differentiation trajectory that allows them to retain neurogenic potential while acquiring mature glial functions. Key neurogenic loci in early enteric nervous system progenitors remain in open chromatin configuration in mature enteric glia, thus facilitating neuronal differentiation under appropriate conditions. Molecular profiling and gene targeting of enteric glial cells in a cell culture model of enteric neurogenesis and a gut injury model demonstrate that neuronal differentiation of glia is driven by transcriptional programs employed in vivo by early progenitors. Our work provides mechanistic insight into the regulatory landscape underpinning the development of intestinal neural circuits and generates a platform for advancing glial cells as therapeutic agents for the treatment of neural deficits.
The enteric nervous system encompasses the gut-intrinsic neuroglial networks that regulate gastrointestinal functions. Based on single-cell analysis, the authors propose a model in which neurogenic differentiation paths branch from a gliogenic trajectory.
Journal Article
Regulation of intestinal immunity and tissue repair by enteric glia
2021
Tissue maintenance and repair depend on the integrated activity of multiple cell types
1
. Whereas the contributions of epithelial
2
,
3
, immune
4
,
5
and stromal cells
6
,
7
in intestinal tissue integrity are well understood, the role of intrinsic neuroglia networks remains largely unknown. Here we uncover important roles of enteric glial cells (EGCs) in intestinal homeostasis, immunity and tissue repair. We demonstrate that infection of mice with
Heligmosomoides polygyrus
leads to enteric gliosis and the upregulation of an interferon gamma (IFNγ) gene signature. IFNγ-dependent gene modules were also induced in EGCs from patients with inflammatory bowel disease
8
. Single-cell transcriptomics analysis of the tunica muscularis showed that glia-specific abrogation of IFNγ signalling leads to tissue-wide activation of pro-inflammatory transcriptional programs. Furthermore, disruption of the IFNγ–EGC signalling axis enhanced the inflammatory and granulomatous response of the tunica muscularis to helminths. Mechanistically, we show that the upregulation of
Cxcl10
is an early immediate response of EGCs to IFNγ signalling and provide evidence that this chemokine and the downstream amplification of IFNγ signalling in the tunica muscularis are required for a measured inflammatory response to helminths and resolution of the granulomatous pathology. Our study demonstrates that IFNγ signalling in enteric glia is central to intestinal homeostasis and reveals critical roles of the IFNγ–EGC–CXCL10 axis in immune response and tissue repair after infectious challenge.
Enteric glial cells have tissue-wide immunoregulatory roles through the upregulation of IFNγ-dependent genes both at steady state and after parasite infection, promoting immune homeostasis and CXCL10-mediated tissue repair after pathogen-induced intestinal damage in mice.
Journal Article
The enteric nervous system: the hub in a star network
The enteric nervous system (ENS) is an important component of gastrointestinal function and a pivotal hub connecting the gut to other organs. A new study now explores the human and mouse ENS at the single-cell level, providing key insights into the transcriptomic landscape of the ENS and its constituent cells.
Journal Article
Molecular profiling of enteric nervous system cell lineages
by
McCallum, Sarah
,
Castaño, Álvaro
,
Heanue, Tiffany A.
in
631/1647/2017/1947
,
631/1647/514/1949
,
631/378/1959/1315/1951
2022
The enteric nervous system (ENS) is an extensive network of enteric neurons and glial cells that is intrinsic to the gut wall and regulates almost all aspects of intestinal physiology. While considerable advancement has been made in understanding the genetic programs regulating ENS development, there is limited understanding of the molecular pathways that control ENS function in adult stages. One of the limitations in advancing the molecular characterization of the adult ENS relates to technical difficulties in purifying healthy neurons and glia from adult intestinal tissues. To overcome this, we developed novel methods for performing transcriptomic analysis of enteric neurons and glia, which are based on the isolation of fluorescently labeled nuclei. Here we provide a step-by-step protocol for the labeling of adult mouse enteric neuronal nuclei using adeno-associated-virus-mediated gene transfer, isolation of the labeled nuclei by fluorimetric analysis, RNA purification and nuclear RNA sequencing. This protocol has also been adapted for the isolation of enteric neuron and glia nuclei from myenteric plexus preparations from adult zebrafish intestine. Finally, we describe a method for visualization and quantification of RNA in myenteric ganglia: Spatial Integration of Granular Nuclear Signals (SIGNS). By following this protocol, it takes ~3 d to generate RNA and create cDNA libraries for nuclear RNA sequencing and 4 d to carry out high-resolution RNA expression analysis on ENS tissues.
Fluorescently labeled nuclei of the enteric nervous system are isolated from adult mouse or zebrafish gut and characterized by nuclear RNA sequencing and visualization and quantification of transcripts using a custom analytical pipeline.
Journal Article
A branching model of cell fate decisions in the enteric nervous system
2022
How neurogenesis and gliogenesis are coordinated during development and why mature glial cells often share properties with neuroectodermal progenitors remains unclear. Here, we have used single cell RNA sequencing to map the regulatory landscape of neuronal and glial differentiation in the mammalian enteric nervous system (ENS). Our analysis indicates that neurogenic trajectories branch directly from a linear gliogenic axis defined by autonomic neural crest cells adopting sequential states as they progressively lose their strong neurogenic bias and acquire properties of adult enteric glia. We identify gene modules associated with transcriptional programs driving enteric neurogenesis and cell state transitions along the gliogenic axis. By comparing the chromatin accessibility profile of autonomic neural crest and adult enteric glia we provide evidence that the latter maintain an epigenetic memory of their neurogenic past. Finally, we demonstrate that adult enteric glia maintain neurogenic potential and are capable of generating enteric neurons in certain contexts by activating transcriptional programs employed by early ENS progenitors. Our studies uncover a novel configuration of enteric neurogenesis and gliogenesis that enables the coordinate development of ENS lineages and provides a mechanistic explanation for the ability of enteric glia to be functionally integrated into the adult intestine and simultaneously maintain attributes of early ENS progenitors.
Neuronal programming by microbiota enables environmental regulation of intestinal motility
by
Stockinger, Brigitta
,
Lopes, Rita
,
Boeing, Stefan
in
Biosensors
,
Colonization
,
Enteric nervous system
2019
Environmental signals modulate the activity of the nervous system and harmonize its output with the outside world. Synaptic activity is crucial for integrating sensory and effector neural pathways but the role of transcriptional mechanisms as environmental sensors in the nervous system remains unclear. By combining a novel strategy for transcriptomic profiling of enteric neurons with microbiota manipulation, we demonstrate that the transcriptional programs of intestinal neural circuits depend on their anatomical and physiological context. We also identify the ligand-dependent transcription factor Aryl hydrocarbon Receptor (AhR) is an intrinsic regulator of enteric nervous system output. AhR is instated as a neuronal biosensor in response to microbiota colonization allowing resident enteric neurons to directly monitor and respond to the intestinal microenvironment. We suggest that AhR signaling integrates neuronal activity with host defence mechanisms towards gut homeostasis and health.