Literature DB >> 32154930

Cerebral dopamine neurotrophic factor is essential for enteric neuronal development, maintenance, and regulation of gastrointestinal transit.

Alcmène Chalazonitis1, ZhiShan Li1, Tuan D Pham1, Jason Chen1, Meenakshi Rao2, Päivi Lindholm3, Mart Saarma3, Maria Lindahl3, Michael D Gershon1.   

Abstract

Cerebral dopamine neurotrophic factor (CDNF) is expressed in the brain and is neuroprotective. We have previously shown that CDNF is also expressed in the bowel and that its absence leads to degeneration and autophagy in the enteric nervous system (ENS), particularly in the submucosal plexus. We now demonstrate that enteric CDNF immunoreactivity is restricted to neurons (submucosal > myenteric) and is not seen in glia, interstitial cells of Cajal, or smooth muscle. Expression of CDNF, moreover, is essential for the normal development and survival of enteric dopaminergic neurons; thus, expression of the dopaminergic neuronal markers, dopamine, tyrosine hydroxylase, and dopamine transporter are deficient in the ileum of Cdnf -/- mice. The normal age-related decline in proportions of submucosal dopaminergic neurons is exacerbated in Cdnf -/- animals. The defect in Cdnf -/- animals is not dopamine-restricted; proportions of other submucosal neurons (NOS-, GABA-, and CGRP-expressing), are also deficient. The deficits in submucosal neurons are reflected functionally in delayed gastric emptying, slowed colonic motility, and prolonged total gastrointestinal transit. CDNF is expressed selectively in isolated enteric neural crest-derived cells (ENCDC), which also express the dopamine-related transcription factor Foxa2. Addition of CDNF to ENCDC promotes development of dopaminergic neurons; moreover, survival of these neurons becomes CDNF-dependent after exposure to bone morphogenetic protein 4. The effects of neither glial cell-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) nor serotonin are additive with CDNF. We suggest that CDNF plays a critical role in development and long-term maintenance of dopaminergic and other sets of submucosal neurons.
© 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bone morphogenetic protein-4; dopaminergic neurons; enteric nervous system; glial cell line derived neurotrophic factor; serotonin; submucosal plexus

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32154930      PMCID: PMC7724936          DOI: 10.1002/cne.24901

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Neurol        ISSN: 0021-9967            Impact factor:   3.028


  96 in total

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6.  Enteric glia express proteolipid protein 1 and are a transcriptionally unique population of glia in the mammalian nervous system.

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9.  Cellular distribution of smooth muscle actins during mammalian embryogenesis: expression of the alpha-vascular but not the gamma-enteric isoform in differentiating striated myocytes.

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Journal:  Development       Date:  2007-06-27       Impact factor: 6.868

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