Lacking colonic mucosal innervation correlated with increased inflammatory immune cell status, microbial dysbiosis, and higher incidence of postoperative enterocolitis in HSCR patients. Mucosal nerve fibers might serve as a prognostic marker for enterocolitis development and offer new therapeutic intervention strategies.
Background & AimsHirschsprung’s disease (HSCR) is a congenital intestinal motility disorder defined by the absence of enteric nervous cells (ganglia). The development of HSCR-associated enterocolitis remains a life-threatening complication. Absence of enteric ganglia implicates extramural innervation of acetylcholine-secreting (cholinergic) nerve fibers. Cholinergic signals have been reported to control excessive inflammation, but the impact on HSCR-associated enterocolitis is unknown.MethodsWe enrolled 44 HSCR patients in a prospective multicenter study and grouped them according to their degree of colonic mucosal cholinergic innervation using immunohistochemistry. The fiber phenotype was correlated with the tissue cytokine profile as well as immune cell frequencies using quantitative reverse-transcribed real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) of whole colonic tissue and fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis of isolated colonic immune cells. Fiber-associated immune cells were identified using confocal immunofluorescence microscopy and characterized by RNA-seq analysis. Microbial dysbiosis was analyzed in colonic patient tissue using 16S rDNA gene sequencing. Finally, the fiber phenotype was correlated with postoperative enterocolitis manifestation.ResultsWe provided evidence that extrinsic mucosal innervation correlated with reduced interleukin (IL)-17 cytokine levels and T-helper-17 (Th17) cell frequencies. Bipolar CD14high macrophages colocalized with neurons and expressed significantly less interleukin-23, a Th17-promoting cytokine. HSCR patients lacking mucosal cholinergic nerve fibers showed microbial dysbiosis and had a higher incidence of postoperative enterocolitis.ConclusionThe mucosal fiber phenotype might serve as a new prognostic marker for enterocolitis development in HSCR patients and may offer an approach to personalized patient care and new future therapeutic options. (www.clinicaltrials.gov accessing number NCT03617640)
Infants affected by Hirschsprung disease (HSCR), a neurodevelopmental congenital disorder, lack ganglia of the intrinsic enteric nervous system (aganglionosis) in a variable length of the colon, and are prone to developing severe Hirschsprung-associated enterocolitis (HAEC). HSCR patients typically show abnormal dense innervation of extrinsic cholinergic nerve fibers throughout the aganglionic rectosigmoid. Cholinergic signaling has been reported to reduce inflammatory response. Consequently, a sparse extrinsic cholinergic innervation in the mucosa of the rectosigmoid correlates with increased inflammatory immune cell frequencies and higher incidence of HAEC in HSCR patients. However, whether cholinergic signals influence the pro-inflammatory immune response of intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) is unknown. Here, we analyzed colonic IEC isolated from 43 HSCR patients with either a low or high mucosal cholinergic innervation density (fiber-low versus fiber-high) as well as from control tissue. Compared to fiber-high samples, IEC purified from fiber-low rectosigmoid expressed significantly higher levels of IL-8 but not TNF-α, IL-10, TGF-β1, Muc-2 or tight junction proteins. IEC from fiber-low rectosigmoid showed higher IL-8 protein concentrations in cell lysates as well as prominent IL-8 immunoreactivity compared to IEC from fiber-high tissue. Using the human colonic IEC cell line SW480 we demonstrated that cholinergic signals suppress lipopolysaccharide-induced IL-8 secretion via the alpha 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (a7nAChR). In conclusion, we showed for the first time that the presence of a dense mucosal cholinergic innervation is associated with decreased secretion of IEC-derived pro-inflammatory IL-8 in the rectosigmoid of HSCR patients likely dependent on a7nAChR activation. Owing to the association between IL-8 and enterocolitis-prone, fiber-low HSCR patients, targeted therapies against IL-8 might be a promising immunotherapy candidate for HAEC treatment.
Lower urinary tract dysfunction is common in patients with anorectal malformations. Normal spine or spinal cord does not exclude neurovesical dysfunction. Myelodysplasia or vertebral anomaly does not determine lower urinary tract dysfunction. Thus, we recommend preoperative urodynamic assessment of the bladder and magnetic resonance imaging of the spine in children with anorectal malformations.
In this fetal lamb model of CDH, tezosentan decreased pulmonary artery pressure but did not modify pulmonary blood flow. Endothelin may play a role in the regulation of pulmonary vascular tone in utero.
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