4.4 Article

Plasticity of colonic enteric nervous system following spinal cord injury in male and female rats

Journal

NEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY AND MOTILITY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nmo.14646

Keywords

gastrointestinal motility; myenteric plexus; neurogenic bowel; spinal cord injuries

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This study found that ICC-MP showed resilience in neurogenic bowel following SCI, and the extent of its neuronal remodeling was gender-dependent. In contrast, ICC-CM did not demonstrate any changes. These results highlight the importance of further understanding the neuromuscular changes driving colonic dysmotility after SCI in order to develop therapeutic targets for neurogenic bowel treatment.
BackgroundNeurogenic bowel is a dysmotility disorder following spinal cord injury (SCI) that negatively impacts quality of life, social integration, and physical health. Colonic transit is directly modulated by the enteric nervous system. Interstitial Cells of Cajal (ICC) distributed throughout the small intestine and colon serve as specialized pacemaker cells, generating rhythmic electrical slow waves within intestinal smooth muscle, or serve as an interface between smooth muscle cells and enteric motor neurons of the myenteric plexus. Interstitial Cells of Cajal loss has been reported for other preclinical models of dysmotility, and our previous experimental SCI study provided evidence of reduced excitatory and inhibitory enteric neuronal count and smooth muscle neural control. MethodsImmunohistochemistry for the ICC-specific marker c-Kit was utilized to examine neuromuscular remodeling of the distal colon in male and female rats with experimental SCI. Key ResultsMyenteric plexus ICC (ICC-MP) exhibited increased cell counts 3 days following SCI in male rats, but did not significantly increase in females until 3 weeks after SCI. On average, ICC-MP total primary arborization length increased significantly in male rats at 3-day, 3-week, and 6-week time points, whereas in females, this increase occurred most frequently at 6 weeks post-SCI. Conversely, circular muscle ICC (ICC-CM) did not demonstrate post-SCI changes. Conclusions and InferencesThese data demonstrate resiliency of the ICC-MP in neurogenic bowel following SCI, unlike seen in other related disease states. This plasticity underscores the need to further understand neuromuscular changes driving colonic dysmotility after SCI in order to advance therapeutic targets for neurogenic bowel treatment.

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