Deakin University
Browse

File(s) not publicly available

High resolution retrograde tracing, morphological analysis, RNA sequencing and differential expression analysis of identified vagal afferent neurons innervating the muscle or mucosa in 3 different stomach regions in the rat

journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-26, 02:45 authored by Martin J Stebbing, Juan C Molero, John FurnessJohn Furness
The functions of the stomach are powerfully influenced by the vagus nerve and vago‐vagal reflexes. The vagal afferent neurons that innervate the stomach and monitor its functional state have clearly demonstrated roles in appetite regulation, gastric accommodation and gastric emptying. In mammals with single compartment stomachs, including humans, the stomach can be divided into functional regions and the muscle and mucosal layers show region‐specific specializations. Electrophysiological and morphological studies suggest that the vagal sensory axons innervating the different regions and layers of the stomach wall have distinct properties and participate in different types of reflex controls. We therefore hypothesized that these functional and structural differences would be reflected in distinct gene expression profiles of afferent neurons, depending on the stomach region and tissue innervated. We developed methods to selectively retrogradely label afferent neurons innervating the muscle or mucosa in the corpus and antrum and the muscle in the fundus in the rat, using local microinjections of fluorescent nanospheres that diffuse minimally. Up to 30 microinjections of 30‐100nL of tracer beads were made into either the muscle or the mucosa in one stomach region in each rat under anesthesia. The animal was allowed to recover and kept for 1‐2 weeks before being humanely killed and tissues harvested. Labelled neurons were studied in situ in the nodose ganglion using confocal microscopy, immunohistochemistry and fluorescence in situ hybridization, and individual neurons collected after dissociation for RNAseq analysis. RNA sequencing was performed using pooled samples of 5‐12 neurons labelled from each region and deep sequencing (30‐50 million reads per sample), and then analyzed using minimal filtering to allow detection of genes expressed at low copy number.Nodose neurons labelled from the mucosa were significantly larger than those labelled from the muscle in both the corpus and antrum, whether quantified in situ or after dissociation, confirming that microinjections into the different stomach wall layers labelled different populations of neurons. Pairwise differential expression analyses of RNAseq data showed distinct mRNA expression profiles depending on the region innervated, and between muscle and mucosal innervating neurons in each region, based on Benjamini/Hochberg adjusted P values (Limma analysis tool). Some genes displayed region specific expression patterns while others showed tissue specific patterns (eg muscle vs mucosa) and some showed both. Among differentially expressed genes were some previously identified to specifically label gastric mucosal and muscle afferent neurons, such as somatostatin, CCKB receptor and GRP65. In addition, many other genes were differentially expressed and mRNA for genes known to be functional in vagal afferent neurons, such as ghrelin, leptin and galanin receptors, were detected. Differential expression patterns for various genes were confirmed in labelled neurons in situ using immunohistochemistry and/or in situhybridization. The data provide a rich resource for further studies of the visceral sensation in the different stomach regions and how region‐specific signaling might regulate appetite and gastric function in both normal and disease states.

History

Journal

The FASEB Journal

Volume

36

ISSN

0892-6638

eISSN

1530-6860

Language

eng

Publication classification

E3.1 Extract of paper

Issue

S1

Publisher

Wiley

Usage metrics

    Research Publications

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC