Cornell Institute of Host-Microbe Interactions and Disease, Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Ithaca, United States.
Institute of Molecular, Cell and Systems Biology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Elife. 2021 Sep 23;10:e64125. doi: 10.7554/eLife.64125.
The gut is the primary interface between an animal and food, but how it adapts to qualitative dietary variation is poorly defined. We find that the midgut plastically resizes following changes in dietary composition. A panel of nutrients collectively promote gut growth, which sugar opposes. Diet influences absolute and relative levels of enterocyte loss and stem cell proliferation, which together determine cell numbers. Diet also influences enterocyte size. A high sugar diet inhibits translation and uncouples intestinal stem cell proliferation from expression of niche-derived signals, but, surprisingly, rescuing these effects genetically was not sufficient to modify diet's impact on midgut size. However, when stem cell proliferation was deficient, diet's impact on enterocyte size was enhanced, and reducing enterocyte-autonomous TOR signaling was sufficient to attenuate diet-dependent midgut resizing. These data clarify the complex relationships between nutrition, epithelial dynamics, and cell size, and reveal a new mode of plastic, diet-dependent organ resizing.
肠道是动物与食物的主要界面,但它如何适应饮食质量的变化还知之甚少。我们发现,中肠会随着饮食成分的变化而进行塑性重塑。一组营养素共同促进肠道生长,而糖则相反。饮食会影响肠细胞损失和干细胞增殖的绝对和相对水平,这共同决定了细胞数量。饮食还会影响肠细胞的大小。高糖饮食会抑制翻译,并使肠道干细胞的增殖与龛源信号的表达脱耦联,但令人惊讶的是,通过基因手段来挽救这些影响并不足以改变饮食对中肠大小的影响。然而,当干细胞增殖不足时,饮食对肠细胞大小的影响就会增强,而降低肠细胞自主的 TOR 信号足以减轻饮食对中肠重塑的影响。这些数据阐明了营养、上皮动力学和细胞大小之间的复杂关系,并揭示了一种新的、依赖于饮食的器官可塑性重塑模式。