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Enteric nervous system development: migration, differentiation, and disease

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.00452.2012

Keywords

enteric nervous system; development; neural crest; cell migration; chain migration; neurochemical coding; axonal targeting; neural crest-derived stem cells; Hirschsprung disease; pseudoobstruction; genetic interactions; gene-environment interactions

Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [R01 DK-087715]
  2. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Clinical Scientist Award in Translational Research [1008525]
  3. Children's Discovery Institute of Washington University
  4. St. Louis Children's Hospital [CH-II-1008-23, CH-II-2010-390, MD-II-2013-269]
  5. Washington University Research Strategic Alliance Grant [120178]

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The enteric nervous system (ENS) provides the intrinsic innervation of the bowel and is the most neurochemically diverse branch of the peripheral nervous system, consisting of two layers of ganglia and fibers encircling the gastrointestinal tract. The ENS is vital for life and is capable of autonomous regulation of motility and secretion. Developmental studies in model organisms and genetic studies of the most common congenital disease of the ENS, Hirschsprung disease, have provided a detailed understanding of ENS development. The ENS originates in the neural crest, mostly from the vagal levels of the neuraxis, which invades, proliferates, and migrates within the intestinal wall until the entire bowel is colonized with enteric neural crest-derived cells (ENCDCs). After initial migration, the ENS develops further by responding to guidance factors and morphogens that pattern the bowel concentrically, differentiating into glia and neuronal subtypes and wiring together to form a functional nervous system. Molecules controlling this process, including glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor and its receptor RET, endothelin (ET)-3 and its receptor endothelin receptor type B, and transcription factors such as SOX10 and PHOX2B, are required for ENS development in humans. Important areas of active investigation include mechanisms that guide ENCDC migration, the role and signals downstream of endothelin receptor type B, and control of differentiation, neurochemical coding, and axonal targeting. Recent work also focuses on disease treatment by exploring the natural role of ENS stem cells and investigating potential therapeutic uses. Disease prevention may also be possible by modifying the fetal microenvironment to reduce the penetrance of Hirschsprung disease-causing mutations.

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