4.7 Article

Hepatocyte Growth Factor and MET Support Mouse Enteric Nervous System Development, the Peristaltic Response, and Intestinal Epithelial Proliferation in Response to Injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 35, Issue 33, Pages 11543-11558

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5267-14.2015

Keywords

calcitonin gene-related peptide; dextran sodium sulfate (DSS); enteric nervous system; hepatocyte growth factor; intrinsic primary afferent neurons; MET

Categories

Funding

  1. Irma and Norman Braman Endowment
  2. Suzi and Scott Lustgarten Center Endowment
  3. Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Research Institute
  4. Children's Discovery Institute of Washington University
  5. St. Louis Children's Hospital [CH-II-1008-123, CH-II-2010-390, MD-II-2013-269]
  6. National Institutes of Health Grants [RO1 DK087715, RO1 DK34153, RO1 DK071619]
  7. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Clinical Scientist Award in Translational Research [1008525]
  8. Canadian Institutes of Health Research

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Factors providing trophic support to diverse enteric neuron subtypes remain poorly understood. We tested the hypothesis that hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and the HGF receptor MET might support some types of enteric neurons. HGF and MET are expressed in fetal and adult enteric nervous system. In vitro, HGF increased enteric neuron differentiation and neurite length, but only if vanishingly small amounts (1 pg/ml) of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor were included in culture media. HGF effects were blocked by phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase inhibitor and by MET-blocking antibody. Both of these inhibitors and MEK inhibition reduced neurite length. In adult mice, MET was restricted to a subset of calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive (IR) myenteric plexus neurons thought to be intrinsic primary afferent neurons (IPANs). Conditional MET kinase domain inactivation (Met(fl/fl); Wnt1Cre+) caused a dramatic loss of myenteric plexus MET-IR neurites and 1-1'-dioctodecyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindocarbocyamine perchlorate (DiI) labeling suggested reduced MET-IR neurite length. In vitro, Met(fl/fl); Wnt1Cre+ mouse bowel had markedly reduced peristalsis in response to mucosal deformation, but normal response to radial muscle stretch. However, whole-bowel transit, small-bowel transit, and colonic-bead expulsion were normal in Met(fl/fl); Wnt1Cre+ mice. Finally, Met(fl/fl); Wnt1Cre+ mice had more bowel injury and reduced epithelial cell proliferation compared with WT animals after dextran sodium sulfate treatment. These results suggest that HGF/MET signaling is important for development and function of a subset IPANs and that these cells regulate intestinal motility and epithelial cell proliferation in response to bowel injury.

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