JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, NON-P.H.S.
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, P.H.S.
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Colonization of the bowel by the precursors of enteric glia: studies of normal and congenitally aganglionic mutant mice.

The terminal portion of the ls/ls mouse is congenitally aganglionic because the precursors of enteric neurons fail to enter this region. This animal was studied in order to gain insight into the origin of enteric glia and into the process by which the precursors of these cells colonize the gut. In control (CD-1) mice, immunoreactivity of the glial marker, glial fibrillary acidic protein, appeared for the first time in the fetal bowel at day E16 and, in adults, was much more intense within intraenteric neural elements than in nerves outside the bowel. Glial fibrillary acidic protein developed in tissue cultures of fetal intestine explanted before the protein appeared in situ, and before the bowel became innervated by extrinsic nerves; thus, the precursors of cells able to elaborate glial fibrillary acidic protein must have been present, but unrecognizable, in the original explants. This explant assay demonstrated that these glial precursors were present in all regions of the bowel of control mice, but not in the presumptive aganglionic bowel of ls/ls mice. The nerves (of extrinsic origin) in the aganglionic tissue of ls/ls mice showed a high level of immunoreactive glial fibrillary acidic protein; nevertheless, their ultrastructure was typical of peripheral nerve, not enteric plexus, and they contained Schwann cells, not enteric glia. These observations support the view that enteric glia are derived from the single wave of neural crest colonists that populates the enteric nervous system before the gut receives its extrinsic innervation. These glial precursors, like neuronal precursors, tend to be excluded from the presumptive aganglionic ls/ls bowel. In contrast, Schwann cells grow into the abnormal ls/ls gut with the extrinsic innervation. The enteric microenvironment appears to promote the expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein in both enteric glia and Schwann cells; however, even within the bowel, Schwann cells retain their characteristic morphology. It is thus probable that the normal enteric nervous system contains supporting cells of separate lineages, enteric glia and Schwann cells.

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