Enteric glia promote intestinal mucosal healing via activation of focal adhesion kinase and release of proEGF
- 1 June 2011
- journal article
- video audio-media
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology
- Vol. 300 (6), G976-G987
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.00427.2010
Abstract
Wound healing of the gastrointestinal mucosa is essential for the maintenance of gut homeostasis and integrity. Enteric glial cells play a major role in regulating intestinal barrier function, but their role in mucosal barrier repair remains unknown. The impact of conditional ablation of enteric glia on dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)-induced mucosal damage and on healing of diclofenac-induced mucosal ulcerations was evaluated in vivo in GFAP-HSVtk transgenic mice. A mechanically induced model of intestinal wound healing was developed to study glial-induced epithelial restitution. Glial-epithelial signaling mechanisms were analyzed by using pharmacological inhibitors, neutralizing antibodies, and genetically engineered intestinal epithelial cells. Enteric glial cells were shown to be abundant in the gut mucosa, where they associate closely with intestinal epithelial cells as a distinct cell population from myofibroblasts. Conditional ablation of enteric glia worsened mucosal damage after DSS treatment and significantly delayed mucosal wound healing following diclofenac-induced small intestinal enteropathy in transgenic mice. Enteric glial cells enhanced epithelial restitution and cell spreading in vitro. These enhanced repair processes were reproduced by use of glial-conditioned media, and soluble proEGF was identified as a secreted glial mediator leading to consecutive activation of epidermal growth factor receptor and focal adhesion kinase signaling pathways in intestinal epithelial cells. Our study shows that enteric glia represent a functionally important cellular component of the intestinal epithelial barrier microenvironment and that the disruption of this cellular network attenuates the mucosal healing process.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vasoactive intestinal peptide ameliorates intestinal barrier disruption associated withCitrobacter rodentium-induced colitisAmerican Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, 2009
- Mechanisms of Epithelial Cell Shedding in the Mammalian Intestine and Maintenance of Barrier FunctionAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2009
- Hypertonic saline reduces neutrophil-epithelial interactions in vitro and gut tissue damage in a mouse model of colitisAmerican Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 2008
- Transforming Growth Factor-β Stimulates Intestinal Epithelial Focal Adhesion Kinase Synthesis via Smad- and p38-Dependent MechanismsThe American Journal of Pathology, 2008
- Activity‐dependent regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase expression in the enteric nervous systemThe Journal of Physiology, 2008
- Mucosal Healing in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Results From a Norwegian Population-Based CohortGastroenterology, 2007
- Fak/Src signaling in human intestinal epithelial cell survival and anoikis: Differentiation state‐specific uncoupling with the PI3‐K/Akt‐1 and MEK/Erk pathwaysJournal of Cellular Physiology, 2007
- Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of the Epithelial Repair in IBDDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 2005
- Focal adhesion kinase: in command and control of cell motilityNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2005
- Mucosal repair in the gastrointestinal tractCritical Care Medicine, 2003