Spontaneous enteric nervous system activity generates contractile patterns prior to maturation of gastrointestinal motility

Spontaneous neuronal network activity is essential to the functional maturation of central and peripheral circuits, yet whether this is a feature of enteric nervous system development has yet to be established. Although enteric neurons are known exhibit electrophysiological properties early in embry...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurogastroenterology and motility 2024-08, p.e14890
Hauptverfasser: Dershowitz, Lori B, Bueno Garcia, Hassler, Perley, Andrew S, Coleman, Todd P, Kaltschmidt, Julia A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Spontaneous neuronal network activity is essential to the functional maturation of central and peripheral circuits, yet whether this is a feature of enteric nervous system development has yet to be established. Although enteric neurons are known exhibit electrophysiological properties early in embryonic development, no connection has been drawn between this neuronal activity and the development of gastrointestinal (GI) motility patterns. We use ex vivo GI motility assays with newly developed unbiased computational analyses to identify GI motility patterns across mouse embryonic development. We find a previously unknown pattern of neurogenic contractions termed "clustered ripples" that arises spontaneously at embryonic day 16.5, an age earlier than any identified mature GI motility patterns. We further show that these contractions are driven by nicotinic cholinergic signaling. Clustered ripples are neurogenic contractile activity that arise from spontaneous ENS activity and precede all known forms of neurogenic GI motility. This earliest motility pattern requires nicotinic cholinergic signaling, which may inform pharmacology for enhancing GI motility in preterm infants.
ISSN:1350-1925
1365-2982
1365-2982
DOI:10.1111/nmo.14890