4.1 Article

Enteric nervous system

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 176-182

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/01.mog.0000153315.28327.6e

Keywords

enteric development; enteric nervous system; Hirschsprung disease; ion channels; receptors; sensory neurons

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Purpose of the review The purpose of this review is to provide a synopsis of how the field of enteric neurobiology has advanced during the past 2 years. Recent findings With more than 500 studies from which to choose, the authors have focused on several themes that illustrate recent progress. There has been an explosion of interest in the development of the enteric nervous system driven by the need to understand development abnormalities, particularly in Hirschsprung disease, and fueled by technical advances for investigating how neural crest-derived cells migrate, proliferate, and differentiate into The use of neural stem cells as enteric neurons and glia. a therapeutic, strategy, aimed at repopulating regions of bowel, where enteric,neurones are reduced or absent, is on the horizon. Enteric reflexes involve interactions between sensory neurons, interneurons, and motor neurons. Recent findings suggest this distinction may be blurred, with neurons having multifunctional. properties, perhaps because enteric neurons unlike their central nervous, system counterparts, are exposed to mechanical forces that they regulate. Another topic the authors have highlighted is pharmacology, with new tools for investigating ion channels, receptors, and transporters, leading to an expanding list of molecular mechanisms that regulate neuronal excitability. Long-term alterations in the expression of these molecules during disease or injury may underlie many gastrointestinal disorders that currently have unknown etiology. The authors finish with a look to the future and what may be the subject of this review next time. Summary Basic science information gathered during the past 2 years provides insight into pathophysiologic processes and will pave the wave for improved understanding of both organic and 'functional' gastrointestinal disorders.

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