Scientists have made an important step in understanding the
organisation of nerve cells embedded within the gut that control
its function - a discovery that could give insight into the origin
of common gastrointestinal diseases, including irritable bowel
syndrome and chronic constipation.
The findings, published in Science, reveal how the
enteric nervous system - a chaotic network of half a billion nerve
cells and many more supporting cells inside the gut wall - is
formed during mouse development. The research was led by the
Francis Crick Institute, in collaboration with the University of
Leuven, Stanford University, the Hubrecht Institute and the Quadram
Institute Bioscience. The work was funded by the Francis Crick
Institute, the Medical Research Council and the UK Biotechnology
and Biological Sciences Research Council.
Often known as the 'second brain' for its vast number of neurons
and complex connectivity, the enteric nervous system has a crucial
role in maintaining a healthy gut. Therefore, understanding how
this neural mosaic is organised could help scientists find
treatments for common gastrointestinal disorders.
"The gut wall is home to many types of nerve cells which appear
to be distributed randomly," says Vassilis Pachnis, Group Leader at
the Francis Crick Institute. "But despite this chaos, the neural
networks of the gut are responsible for well organised and
stereotypic functions such as production of stomach acid, movement
of food along the gut, communication with immune cells and
bacteria, and relay of information to the brain. We wanted to find
out how organised activity emerges from such a chaotic system."
During development, a unique and dynamic population of cells
known as progenitor cells divide to produce copies of themselves,
which can then generate many other types of cells. Using genetic
tools, the team labelled individual progenitor cells of the enteric
nervous system with unique colours and followed their descendants -
also marked with the same colour - through development and into the
adult animal. By examining the type of cells produced by single
progenitors, they could understand their properties.
They found that some progenitors only produced nerve cells,
others only produced nerve-supporting cells called glia, and some
produced both. Neurons and glia originating from the same parent
stayed close to each other, forming relatively tight groups of
cells. Cell groups that descended from different but neighbouring
parent cells overlapped like a Venn diagram that could be viewed on
the gut surface. Interestingly, this close relationship was
maintained by the descendants of single progenitors down through
all layers of the gut wall thereby forming overlapping columns of
cells.
"We uncovered a set of rules that control the organisation of
the 'second brain' not just along a single gut layer but across the
3D space of the gut wall," says Reena Lasrado, first author of the
paper and researcher in Vassilis's lab at the Crick.
Image: Nerve cells (yellow) from the same parent cell are
organized in 3D columns that extend through the layers of the gut
wall. Credit: Reena Lasrado. ©
Francis Crick Institute
The team explored whether this intricate structure of the
enteric nervous system also contributes to nerve cell activity in
the gut.
"A subtle electrical stimulation to the enteric nervous system
showed that nerve cells generated by the same parent cell responded
in synchrony," says Vassilis. "This suggests that developmental
relationships between cells of the enteric nervous system of
mammals are fundamental for the neural regulation of gut
function."
"Now that we have a better understanding of how the enteric
nervous system is built and works, we can start to look at what
happens when things go wrong particularly during the critical
stages of embryo development or early life. Perhaps mistakes in the
blueprint used to build the neural networks of the gut are the
basis of common gastrointestinal problems."
The paper 'Lineage-dependent spatial and functional
organization of the mammalian enteric nervous system' is
published in Science.