4.8 Article

An Intestinal Organ Culture System Uncovers a Role for the Nervous System in Microbe-Immune Crosstalk

期刊

CELL
卷 168, 期 6, 页码 1135-+

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.02.009

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资金

  1. UCB
  2. JPB Foundation
  3. NIH [R37-AI051530, DP2AT009499]
  4. Harvard Digestive Disease Center pilot grant
  5. Schuyler Pierce Memorial Fellowship
  6. JDRF [3-2014-216]

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Investigation of host-environment interactions in the gut would benefit from a culture system that maintained tissue architecture yet allowed tight experimental control. We devised a microfabricated organ culture system that viably preserves the normal multicellular composition of the mouse intestine, with luminal flow to control perturbations (e.g., microbes, drugs). It enables studying short-term responses of diverse gut components (immune, neuronal, etc.). We focused on the early response to bacteria that induce either Th17 or RORg(+) T-regulatory (Treg) cells in vivo. Transcriptional responses partially reproduced in vivo signatures, but these microbes elicited diametrically opposite changes in expression of a neuronal-specific gene set, notably nociceptive neuropeptides. We demonstrated activation of sensory neurons by microbes, correlating with RORg(+) Treg induction. Colonic RORg(+) Treg frequencies increased in mice lacking TAC1 neuropeptide precursor and decreased in capsaicin-diet fed mice. Thus, differential engagement of the enteric nervous system may partake in bifurcating pro-or anti-inflammatory responses to microbes.

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