Abstract

BackgroundIt has long been hypothesized that enteric neurons are able to detect nutrients present in the intestinal lumen, but direct evidence in intact preparations of the intestine is lacking. Understanding how enteric neurons react to changes in dietary constituents will open new avenues for discoveries on the relation between nutrition, modulation of gut function, and health.AimTo measure neuronal activity in the enteric nervous system in response to luminal nutrients.MethodsWe have designed chambers allowing us to visualize, record and quantify intracellular calcium activity in 3D live‐cell confocal recordings of neurons from intact, whole thickness segments of mouse intestine. Twenty mice expressing the genetically encoded calcium reporter Gcamp6 under the control of the pan‐neuronal Wnt1 promoter were used to record intracellular calcium activity in neurons from the jejunum and colon, while perfusing different nutrients through the lumen. Krebs solution was perfused as control and Ensure®, 10% Intralipid® or 20mM Glucose were used as stimuli. 3D videos of calcium fluorescence in the neuronal network were acquired with a Nikon A1R confocal microscope and calcium dynamics were analyzed using the Imaris software (Bitplane). Results are expressed as relative changes in fluorescence intensity (ΔF/F) ± SEM among the neuronal populations studied.ResultsPerfusion of the intestine with Ensure® (liquid meal replacement) increased the fluorescence intensity in reactive neurons by 670 ± 270% in the jejunum and 403 ± 62% in the colon. Peak amplitude was measured on average 5–6 minutes after the initiation of the nutrient perfusion. Perfusion with 10% Intralipid® (lipid emulsion) increased the fluorescence intensity in reactive neurons by 300 ± 180% in the jejunum and 150 ± 15% in the colon. On the other hand, perfusion of the intestine with Glucose (20mM in Krebs solution) lowered baseline fluorescence intensity in a population of neurons by −91 ± 3% in the jejunum and −80 ± 3% in the colon. The percentage of neurons reacting to intraluminal stimuli was dependent on the stimulus and was different between the jejunum and the colon, indicating that subpopulations of neurons might differentially react to different nutrient stimuli.ConclusionsWe report the existence of slow intracellular calcium changes in the neurons in the intestine that vary depending on the nutrient content of the intestinal lumen. The origin and functional consequences of these changes in intracellular calcium activity as well as the identity of responding neurons are currently under investigation.Support or Funding InformationFunding sources: Canadian institutes of Health Research, Alberta Innovates, Human Frontier Science Program.This abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2019 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal.

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