Prochera Aleksandra, Muppirala Anoohya N, Kuziel Gavin A, Soualhi Salima, Shepherd Amy, Sun Liang, Issac Biju, Rosenberg Harry J, Karim Farah, Perez Kristina, Smith Kyle H, Archibald Tonora H, Rakoff-Nahoum Seth, Hagen Susan J, Rao Meenakshi
Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, United States.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, United States.
Elife. 2025 Apr 14;13:RP97144. doi: 10.7554/eLife.97144.
Glial cells of the enteric nervous system (ENS) interact closely with the intestinal epithelium and secrete signals that influence epithelial cell proliferation and barrier formation in vitro. Whether these interactions are important in vivo, however, is unclear because previous studies reached conflicting conclusions (Prochera and Rao, 2023). To better define the roles of enteric glia in steady state regulation of the intestinal epithelium, we characterized the glia in closest proximity to epithelial cells and found that the majority express the gene Proteolipid protein 1 () in both mice and humans. To test their functions using an unbiased approach, we genetically depleted PLP1 cells in mice and transcriptionally profiled the small and large intestines. Surprisingly, glial loss had minimal effects on transcriptional programs and the few identified changes varied along the gastrointestinal tract. In the ileum, where enteric glia had been considered most essential for epithelial integrity, glial depletion did not drastically alter epithelial gene expression but caused a modest enrichment in signatures of Paneth cells, a secretory cell type important for innate immunity. In the absence of PLP1 glia, Paneth cell number was intact, but a subset appeared abnormal with irregular and heterogenous cytoplasmic granules, suggesting a secretory deficit. Consistent with this possibility, ileal explants from glial-depleted mice secreted less functional lysozyme than controls with corresponding effects on fecal microbial composition. Collectively, these data suggest that enteric glia do not exert broad effects on the intestinal epithelium but have an essential role in regulating Paneth cell function and gut microbial ecology.
肠神经系统(ENS)的神经胶质细胞与肠道上皮紧密相互作用,并分泌信号,这些信号在体外影响上皮细胞增殖和屏障形成。然而,这些相互作用在体内是否重要尚不清楚,因为先前的研究得出了相互矛盾的结论(普罗切拉和拉奥,2023年)。为了更好地确定肠神经胶质细胞在肠道上皮稳态调节中的作用,我们对最接近上皮细胞的神经胶质细胞进行了表征,发现大多数神经胶质细胞在小鼠和人类中都表达蛋白脂质蛋白1(PLP1)基因。为了使用无偏见的方法测试它们的功能,我们在小鼠中通过基因手段去除了PLP1阳性细胞,并对小肠和大肠进行了转录谱分析。令人惊讶的是,神经胶质细胞缺失对转录程序的影响极小,少数已确定的变化在胃肠道中各不相同。在回肠中,肠神经胶质细胞被认为对上皮完整性最为关键,神经胶质细胞缺失并未大幅改变上皮基因表达,但导致潘氏细胞特征有适度增加,潘氏细胞是一种对先天免疫很重要的分泌细胞类型。在没有PLP1阳性神经胶质细胞的情况下,潘氏细胞数量保持完整,但一部分细胞出现异常,细胞质颗粒不规则且异质,表明存在分泌缺陷。与此可能性一致的是,来自神经胶质细胞缺失小鼠的回肠外植体分泌的功能性溶菌酶比对照组少,对粪便微生物组成有相应影响。总体而言,这些数据表明肠神经胶质细胞对肠道上皮没有广泛影响,但在调节潘氏细胞功能和肠道微生物生态方面具有重要作用。