Adult enteric nervous system in health is maintained by a dynamic balance between neuronal apoptosis and neurogenesis

Subhash Kulkarni(Johns Hopkins University), Maria-Adelaide Micci(The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston), Jenna Leser(Johns Hopkins University), Changsik Shin(Pennsylvania State University), Shiue–Cheng Tang(National Tsing Hua University), Ya–Yuan Fu(Johns Hopkins University), Liansheng Liu(Johns Hopkins University), Qian Li(Johns Hopkins University), Monalee Saha(Johns Hopkins University), Cuiping Li(Johns Hopkins University), Grigori Enikolopov(Johns Hopkins University), Laren Becker(Stanford University), Nikolai Rakhilin(Duke University), Michael Anderson(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xiling Shen(Duke University), Xinzhong Dong(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Manish J. Butte(University of California, Los Angeles), Hongjun Song(University of Maryland, Baltimore), E. Michelle Southard‐Smith(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Raj P. Kapur(Seattle Children's Hospital), Milena Bogunovic(Pennsylvania State University), Pankaj J. Pasricha(Johns Hopkins University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 18, 2017
Cited by 289Open Access
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Abstract

According to current dogma, there is little or no ongoing neurogenesis in the fully developed adult enteric nervous system. This lack of neurogenesis leaves unanswered the question of how enteric neuronal populations are maintained in adult guts, given previous reports of ongoing neuronal death. Here, we confirm that despite ongoing neuronal cell loss because of apoptosis in the myenteric ganglia of the adult small intestine, total myenteric neuronal numbers remain constant. This observed neuronal homeostasis is maintained by new neurons formed in vivo from dividing precursor cells that are located within myenteric ganglia and express both Nestin and p75NTR, but not the pan-glial marker Sox10. Mutation of the phosphatase and tensin homolog gene in this pool of adult precursors leads to an increase in enteric neuronal number, resulting in ganglioneuromatosis, modeling the corresponding disorder in humans. Taken together, our results show significant turnover and neurogenesis of adult enteric neurons and provide a paradigm for understanding the enteric nervous system in health and disease.


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