Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Pediatrics, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York.
Gastroenterology. 2024 Mar;166(3):437-449. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2023.11.020. Epub 2023 Nov 21.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: RET tyrosine kinase is necessary for enteric nervous system development. Loss-of-function RET mutations cause Hirschsprung disease (HSCR), in which infants are born with aganglionic bowel. Despite surgical correction, patients with HSCR often experience chronic defecatory dysfunction and enterocolitis, suggesting that RET is important after development. To test this hypothesis, we determined the location of postnatal RET and its significance in gastrointestinal (GI) motility.
Ret mice and human transcriptional profiling data were studied to identify the enteric neuronal and epithelial cells that express RET. To determine whether RET regulates gut motility in vivo, genetic, and pharmacologic approaches were used to disrupt RET in all RET-expressing cells, a subset of enteric neurons, or intestinal epithelial cells.
Distinct subsets of enteric neurons and enteroendocrine cells expressed RET in the adult intestine. RET disruption in the epithelium, rather than in enteric neurons, slowed GI motility selectively in male mice. RET kinase inhibition phenocopied this effect. Most RET epithelial cells were either enterochromaffin cells that release serotonin or L-cells that release peptide YY (PYY) and glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), both of which can alter motility. RET kinase inhibition exaggerated PYY and GLP-1 release in a nutrient-dependent manner without altering serotonin secretion in mice and human organoids. PYY receptor blockade rescued dysmotility in mice lacking epithelial RET.
RET signaling normally limits nutrient-dependent peptide release from L-cells and this activity is necessary for normal intestinal motility in male mice. These effects could contribute to dysmotility in HSCR, which predominantly affects males, and uncovers a mechanism that could be targeted to treat post-prandial GI dysfunction.
RET 酪氨酸激酶对于肠神经系统的发育是必需的。失活型 RET 突变会导致先天性巨结肠(HSCR),患儿出生时无神经节的肠段。尽管进行了手术矫正,但 HSCR 患者常经历慢性排便功能障碍和肠炎,这表明 RET 在发育后仍然重要。为了验证这一假说,我们确定了 RET 在胃肠道(GI)运动中的定位及其在其中的作用。
研究了 Ret 小鼠和人类转录组数据,以确定表达 RET 的肠神经元和肠上皮细胞。为了确定 RET 是否调节体内肠道运动,我们采用了遗传和药理学方法,在所有表达 RET 的细胞、部分肠神经元或肠上皮细胞中破坏 RET。
在成年肠道中,不同的肠神经元亚群和肠内分泌细胞表达 RET。上皮细胞而非肠神经元中 RET 的破坏选择性地减缓了雄性小鼠的 GI 运动。RET 激酶抑制可模拟这种作用。大多数 RET 上皮细胞是释放 5-羟色胺的肠嗜铬细胞,或是释放肽 YY(PYY)和胰高血糖素样肽 1(GLP-1)的 L 细胞,这两者均可改变运动。RET 激酶抑制以营养依赖的方式显著增加 PYY 和 GLP-1 的释放,而不改变小鼠和人类器官中的 5-羟色胺分泌。在缺乏上皮 RET 的小鼠中,PYY 受体阻断可挽救运动障碍。
RET 信号通常限制 L 细胞中营养依赖肽的释放,这种活性对于雄性小鼠的正常肠道运动是必需的。这些作用可能导致 HSCR 中运动障碍,HSCR 主要影响男性,并揭示了一种可以作为治疗餐后 GI 功能障碍的靶点的机制。