Regionally defective colonization of the terminal bowel by the precursors of enteric neurons in lethal spotted mutant mice |
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Authors: | T.P. Rothman M.D. Gershon |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY 10032, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | In order to gain insight into the process of colonization of the bowel by the neural crest-derived precursors of enteric neurons, the development of the enteric nervous system was examined in lethal spotted mutant mice, a strain in which a segment of bowel is congenitally aganglionic. In addition, nerve fibers within the ganglionic and aganglionic zones of the gut of adult mutant mice were investigated with respect to their content of acetylcholinesterase, immunoreactive substance P, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and serotonin, and their ability to take up [3Hserotonin. In both the fetal gut of developing mutant mice and in the mature bowel of adult animals abnormalities were limited to the terminal 2 mm of colon. The enteric nervous system in the proximal alimentary tract was indistinguishable from that of control animals for all of the parameters examined. In the terminal bowel, the normal plexiform pattern of the innervation and ganglion cell bodies were replaced by a coarse reticulum of nerve fibers that stained for acetylcholineserase and were continuous with extrinsic nerves running between the colon and the pelvic plexus. These coarse nerve bundles contained greatly reduced numbers of fibers that displayed substance P- and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-like immunoreactivity, but a serotonergic innervation was totally missing from the aganglionic bowel. During development, acetylcholineserase and uptake of [3Hserotonin appeared in neural elements in the foregut of mutant mice on the 12th day of embryonic life (E12), about the same time these markers appeared in the forgut in normal mice. By day E14, neurons expressing one or the other marker were recognizable as far distally as about 2 mm from the anus. The appearance of neurons in segments of gut grown for 2 weeks as expiants in culture was used as an assay for the presence of neuronal progenitor cells in the segments of fetal bowel at the time of explantation. Both acetyl- cholinesterase activity and uptake of [3Hserotonin developed in neuronsin vitro in expiants of proximal bowel between days E10 and E17. At all times, however, the terminal 2mm of mutant but not normal fetal gut gave rise to aneuronal cultures. In some mutant mice rare, small, ectopically-situated pelvic ganglia were found just outside aganglionic segments of fetal colon. Uptake of [3Hserotonin, normally a marker for intrinsic enteric neurites, was found in these ganglia.The experiments suppport the hypothesis that the terminal 2 mm of the gut in lethal spotted mutant mice is intrinsically abnormal and thus cannot be colonized by the precursors of enteric neurons. The defect seems to be specific in that both cells and processes of intrinsic enteric neurons, including all serotonergic and most peptidergic neurites, seem to be excluded from the abnormal region while extrinsic nerve fibers, including sympathetic and sensory axons, are able to enter the aganglionic zones. Since examination of neural progenitor cells has failed to reveal a significant proximo-distal displacement of these cells through the enteric tube during development of the murine bowel, a defect in the migration of precursor cells down the alimentary tract to the terminal gut seems unlikely to be substantially involved in the pathogenesis of aganglionosis. This conclusion is supported by the normal enteric nervous system in proximal regions of the mutant gut and the presence of enteric type neurons outside of, but at the same level as the aganglionic region. |
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Keywords: | AChE acetylcholinesterase CNS central nervous system E9–E17 days 9–17 of embryonic life ENS enteric nervous sytem 5-HT serotinin ls/ls lethal spotted mutant mice PNS peripheral nervous system SP substance P VIP vasoactive intestinal polypeptide |
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