4.7 Article

The transwall gradient across the mouse colonic circular muscle layer is carbon monoxide dependent

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 24, Issue 10, Pages 3840-3849

Publisher

FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL
DOI: 10.1096/fj.10-156232

Keywords

heme oxygenase-2; interstitial cells of Cajal; smooth muscle; submucosal ganglion neurons

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health [NIH DK17238]

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Gastric and small intestinal circular smooth muscle layers have a transwall resting membrane potential (RMP) gradient that is dependent on release of carbon monoxide (CO) from interstitial cells of Cajal (ICCs). Our aim was to determine whether a RMP gradient exists in the mouse colon and whether the gradient is CO dependent. Microelectrodes were used to record RMPs from muscle cells at different depths of the circular muscle layer from wild-type and heme oxygenase-2-knockout (HO-2-KO) mice. A transwall RMP gradient was present in wild-type mice. The CO scavenger oxyhemoglobin (20 mu M) and the heme oxygenase inhibitor chromium mesoporphyrin IX (CrMP, 5 mu M) abolished the transwall gradient. The gradient was absent in HO-2-KO mice. Tetrodotoxin (1 mu M) caused a significant depolarization in circular smooth muscle cells throughout the circular muscle layer and abolished the transwall gradient. Removal of the submucosal neurons abolished the gradient. The majority of submucosal neurons contained HO-2 immunoreactivity (HO-2-IR), while ICCs did not. These data show for the first time that a transwall gradient exists across the circular smooth muscle layer of the mouse colon, that the gradient is due to CO, and that the source of CO is the submucosal neurons.-Sha, L., Farrugia, G., Linden, D. R., Szurszewski, J. H. The transwall gradient across the mouse colonic circular muscle layer is carbon monoxide dependent. FASEB J. 24, 3840-3849 (2010). www.fasebj.org

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