Spinal cord injury-induced neurogenic bowel: A role for host-microbiome interactions in bowel pain and dysfunction

Q2 Medicine Neurobiology of Pain Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.ynpai.2024.100156
Adam B. Willits , Leena Kader , Olivia Eller , Emily Roberts , Bailey Bye , Taylor Strope , Bret D. Freudenthal , Shahid Umar , Sree Chintapalli , Kartik Shankar , Dong Pei , Julie Christianson , Kyle M. Baumbauer , Erin E. Young
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Abstract

Background and aims

Spinal cord injury (SCI) affects roughly 300,000 Americans with 17,000 new cases added annually. In addition to paralysis, 60% of people with SCI develop neurogenic bowel (NB), a syndrome characterized by slow colonic transit, constipation, and chronic abdominal pain. The knowledge gap surrounding NB mechanisms after SCI means that interventions are primarily symptom-focused and largely ineffective. The goal of the present studies was to identify mechanism(s) that initiate and maintain NB after SCI as a critical first step in the development of evidence-based, novel therapeutic treatment options.

Methods

Following spinal contusion injury at T9, we observed alterations in bowel structure and function reflecting key clinical features of NB. We then leveraged tissue-specific whole transcriptome analyses (RNAseq) and fecal 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing in combination with histological, molecular, and functional (Ca2+ imaging) approaches to identify potential mechanism(s) underlying the generation of the NB phenotype.

Results

In agreement with prior reports focused on SCI-induced changes in the skin, we observed a rapid and persistent increase in expression of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) expression in the colon. This is suggestive of a neurogenic inflammation-like process engaged by antidromic activity of below-level primary afferents following SCI. CGRP has been shown to disrupt colon homeostasis and negatively affect peristalsis and colon function. As predicted, contusion SCI resulted in increased colonic transit time, expansion of lymphatic nodules, colonic structural and genomic damage, and disruption of the inner, sterile intestinal mucus layer corresponding to increased CGRP expression in the colon. Gut microbiome colonization significantly shifted over 28 days leading to the increase in Anaeroplasma, a pathogenic, gram-negative microbe. Moreover, colon specific vagal afferents and enteric neurons were hyperresponsive after SCI to different agonists including fecal supernatants.

Conclusions

Our data suggest that SCI results in overexpression of colonic CGRP which could alter colon structure and function. Neurogenic inflammatory-like processes and gut microbiome dysbiosis can also sensitize vagal afferents, providing a mechanism for visceral pain despite the loss of normal sensation post-SCI. These data may shed light on novel therapeutic interventions targeting this process to prevent NB development in patients.

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脊髓损伤引起的神经源性肠病:宿主-微生物组相互作用在肠道疼痛和功能障碍中的作用
背景和目的脊髓损伤(SCI)影响着大约 30 万美国人,每年新增病例 1.7 万例。除瘫痪外,60% 的 SCI 患者会出现神经源性肠病(NB),这是一种以结肠转运缓慢、便秘和慢性腹痛为特征的综合征。围绕 SCI 后神经源性肠病机制的知识空白意味着干预措施主要以症状为重点,且大多无效。本研究的目标是确定脊髓损伤后启动和维持 NB 的机制,作为开发循证、新型治疗方案的关键第一步。方法在 T9 脊柱挫伤后,我们观察到肠道结构和功能的改变,这反映了 NB 的主要临床特征。然后,我们利用组织特异性全转录组分析(RNAseq)和粪便 16S rRNA 扩增子测序,结合组织学、分子和功能(Ca2+ 成像)方法,确定了 NB 表型产生的潜在机制。结果与之前关注 SCI 引起的皮肤变化的报道一致,我们观察到结肠中降钙素基因相关肽(CGRP)表达的快速、持续增加。这表明,在 SCI 之后,水平以下的初级传入神经的反自律活动参与了类似神经源性炎症的过程。研究表明,CGRP 会破坏结肠的平衡,对肠蠕动和结肠功能产生负面影响。正如预测的那样,挫伤性 SCI 会导致结肠转运时间延长、淋巴结扩大、结肠结构和基因组损伤,以及结肠内无菌肠粘液层的破坏,从而增加 CGRP 在结肠中的表达。在 28 天内,肠道微生物群的定植发生了显著变化,导致致病性革兰氏阴性微生物厌氧支原体(Anaeroplasma)的增加。此外,结肠特异性迷走神经传入和肠神经元在 SCI 后对不同的激动剂(包括粪便上清液)反应过度。神经源性炎症样过程和肠道微生物群失调也会使迷走神经传入敏感化,从而为内脏疼痛提供了一种机制,尽管 SCI 后失去了正常的感觉。这些数据可能会揭示针对这一过程的新型治疗干预措施,以防止患者出现 NB。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurobiology of Pain
Neurobiology of Pain Medicine-Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
审稿时长
54 days
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