Abstract
Astrocytes respond to synaptic activity in the CNS. Astrocytic responses are synapse specific and precisely regulate synaptic activity. Glia in the peripheral nervous system also respond to neuronal activity, but it is unknown whether glial responses are synapse specific. We addressed this issue by examining the activation of enteric glia by distinct neuronal subpopulations in the enteric nervous system. Enteric glia are unique peripheral glia that surround enteric neurons and respond to neuronally released ATP with increases in intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i). Autonomic control of colonic function is mediated by intrinsic (enteric) and extrinsic (sympathetic, parasympathetic, primary afferent) neural pathways. Here we test the hypothesis that a defined population of neurons activates enteric glia using a variety of techniques to ablate or stimulate components of the autonomic innervation of the colon. Our findings demonstrate that, in the male guinea pig colon, activation of intrinsic neurons does not stimulate glial [Ca2+]i responses and fast enteric neurotransmission is not necessary to initiate glial responses. However, ablating extrinsic innervation significantly reduces glial responses to neuronal activation. Activation of primary afferent fibers does not activate glial [Ca2+]i responses. Selectively ablating sympathetic fibers reduces glial activation to a similar extent as total extrinsic denervation. Neuronal activation of glia follows the same frequency dependence as sympathetic neurotransmitter release, but the only sympathetic neurotransmitter that activates glial [Ca2+]i responses is ATP, suggesting that sympathetic fibers release ATP to activate enteric glia. Therefore, enteric glia discern activity in adjacent synaptic pathways and selectively respond to sympathetic activation.
Introduction
The concept of neuron–glia chemical signaling is slowly gaining acceptance as a fundamental principle of nervous system function. Glia, or more specifically, in terms of synaptic function, astrocytes, express receptors for multiple ligands and, once activated, can quickly recruit neighboring glia either via paracrine signals or through gap junctions (Kettenmann and Ransom, 2004). This apparently indiscriminate signaling capacity is at odds with our current views of nervous system function, specifically, that neural regulation is both temporally and spatially precise. One resolution to this impasse is found in recent work demonstrating that activation of discrete subdomains of individual astrocytes can signal independently to control the strength of neuronal synapses in their immediate vicinity (Gordon et al., 2009). This suggests that glia have the capacity for differential signal transduction that is consistent with unique neuronal targeting.
Outside of the CNS, the concepts of neuron–glial signaling are less well defined. Autonomic nerves release multiple chemical messengers (Burnstock, 2009), and it is not clear whether glia are targeted by specific transmitters or specific populations of autonomic nerves. We have addressed this issue by examining the activation of enteric glia by distinct neuronal subpopulations in the enteric nervous system (ENS). The ENS is particularly well suited for this type of work because neuron–glia interactions can be studied in situ using preparations with intact synaptic pathways from four main neuronal populations that can be selectively stimulated or eliminated (Furness, 2006). Within the ENS, neurons and glia are tightly packed into ganglia that are interconnected by nerve fiber bundles containing the axons of intrinsic (enteric) as well as extrinsic (sympathetic, parasympathetic, primary afferent) neurons. Enteric glia surround enteric synapses and share many morphological, molecular, and electrophysiological features with astrocytes (Gabella, 1981; Jessen and Mirsky, 1983; Hanani and Reichenbach, 1994). Importantly, like astrocytes, enteric glia are active participants at enteric synapses and respond to neuronal activity (Gomes et al., 2009; Gulbransen and Sharkey, 2009). Our previous data demonstrate that electrical stimulation of axons in interganglionic nerve fiber bundles releases ATP from neurons that stimulates [Ca2+]i responses in enteric glia in situ (Gulbransen and Sharkey, 2009).
Although glia are recruited by neuronal activation, the specificity of this recruitment has not been examined. To determine which neuronal element(s) of the ENS signals to enteric glia, we used a combination of techniques to selectively stimulate or eliminate intrinsic and extrinsic populations of neurons and assayed glial activation using calcium imaging. Given that astrocytes have the capacity to selectively respond to activity at specific synapses, we hypothesized that a defined population of neurons releases ATP that activates enteric glia. We find that enteric glia are specifically activated by sympathetic postganglionic neurons innervating the colonic myenteric plexus, supporting the view that glia are not indiscriminate detectors of neuronal activity and can discern activity in specific neural pathways.
Materials and Methods
Animals.
Animal protocols were approved by the University of Calgary Animal Care Committee and were performed in accordance with the guidelines of the Canadian Council on Animal Care. Male albino guinea pigs (225–300 g; Charles River) were used for all studies. Animals were housed in plastic sawdust floor cages and had access to Purina Laboratory Chow and water ad libitum.
Tissue preparation.
Tissue was prepared as described by Gulbransen and Sharkey (2009) with only minor modifications. Briefly, animals were deeply anesthetized with halothane (5% in oxygen; Benson Medical Industries), and a small segment of distal colon was removed and placed in ice-cold oxygenated (95% O2, 5% CO2) physiological saline solution (PSS). Tissue was transferred to a Sylgard (Dow-Corning)-coated Petri dish, opened along the mesenteric border, and pinned flat, and the mucosa, submucosa, and circular muscle were removed with forceps to expose the myenteric plexus. The resulting longitudinal muscle myenteric plexus (LMMP) preparation was transferred to a Sylgard-coated, open diamond bath recording chamber, pinned flat, and incubated for 15 min at room temperature in an enzyme mixture consisting of 156.25 U/ml Collagenase type II (Invitrogen Canada) and 1 U/ml Dispase II (Roche) dissolved in PSS with 95% O2, 5% CO2 gently blowing across the surface of the buffer. Gentle tituration with PSS removed excess muscle and connective tissue and stopped enzyme activity. LMMPs were loaded in the dark for 45 min at 37°C (with oxygenation) with 4 μmol/L Fluo-4 AM (Invitrogen), 0.02% Pluronic F-127 (Invitrogen), and 200 μmol/l water-soluble Probenecid (Invitrogen) in PSS. LMMPs were then rinsed in PSS and sat for 20 min to de-esterify before imaging.
Ca2+ imaging.
Images were acquired every 1–2 s through the 20× water-immersion objective [UMPlanFl, 0.5 numerical aperture (NA)] of an upright Olympus BX61WI motorized fixed-stage microscope using Imaging Workbench 6 software (INDEC BioSystems) and a CCD Hamamatsu ORCA-ER digital camera (Hamamatsu Photonics). Excitation/emission wavelengths were 485/525 nm for Fluo-4. LMMPs were continuously perfused with PSS prewarmed to near 33°C using a gravity flow perfusion system (Automate Scientific) and custom-made laminar flow open diamond bath perfusion chambers at ∼2–3 ml/min.
Fiber tract stimulation.
Synaptic activation of neurons was elicited by placing a concentric bipolar microelectrode, insulated except at the tip (World Precision Instruments), on an interganglionic fiber tract one ganglia away from the ganglion being imaged and delivering a train of 0.5 ms, 5 V, 2, 10, or 20 Hz pulse of current for 3 s with a Grass SD9 stimulator (Grass Technologies, Astro-Med).
6-Hydroxydopamine chemical sympathectomy.
6-Hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) treatment was performed as described by Gershon et al. (1990). Guinea pigs received two subcutaneous injections (24 h apart) of 100 mg/kg 6-OHDA (Sigma-Aldrich) dissolved in H2O with 0.1% sodium metabisulfite as a stabilizing agent. Tissue was taken ∼17 h after the last injection. Loss of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-immunoreactive (IR) nerve fibers in the myenteric plexus was taken as verification of effectiveness of 6-OHDA treatment.
Surgical denervation of the colon.
Extrinsic denervation was accomplished using the surgical technique described by Messenger and Furness (1992) and Lomax et al. (2000). Before surgery, guinea pigs were sedated with Diazepam (5 mg/kg, i.p.; Sandoz Canada) and injected with the analgesic Metacam (meloxicam) (1 mg/kg, s.c.; Boehringer Ingelheim) and the antibacterial Baytril (enrofloxacine) (5 mg/kg, s.c.; Bayer, Animal Health Division). Animals were then anesthetized with an intramuscular injection of 50 mg/kg ketamine and 5 mg/kg xylazine, shaved, and cleaned with 70% ethanol (EtOH) and betadine, and a loop of distal colon was exposed through an abdominal incision. The colonic nerves associated with the mesenteric blood vessels supplying the section of distal colon were severed, the surrounding mesentery was cut, and the artery was lightly swabbed with 80% phenol. The site of denervation was marked by a piece of surgical thread tied around the main arteriole, the colon was returned to the abdominal cavity, and the incision was sutured closed. Animals were maintained on a heating pad until the following day when they were returned to their home cage and were used 7–8 d after surgery to allow degeneration of the severed axons. As with 6-OHDA treatment, loss of TH-IR nerve fibers in the myenteric plexus was taken as verification of effectiveness of surgical denervation.
Whole-mount immunohistochemistry.
Immunohistochemistry was performed as described by Nasser et al. (2007). Briefly, LMMP whole mounts were prepared from Zamboni's fixed tissue, and primary antibodies to TH (rabbit anti-TH, 1:1000; Eugene Biotech) and protein gene product 9.5 (PGP) (mouse anti-PGP, 1:500; Ultraclone) were applied for 48 h at 4°C. TH was detected with the secondary antibody donkey anti-rabbit cyanine 3 (1:300; Jackson ImmunoResearch, BioCAN Scientific) and PGP9.5 with goat anti-mouse Alexa 488 (1:200; Invitrogen).
Confocal microscopy.
Immunofluorescence was imaged on an Olympus FluoView FV1000 confocal microscope (Olympus America) using either a 40× (UPlan FLN, 1.30 NA) or 60× (PlanApo N, 1.42 NA) oil-immersion lens. Optical sections (1 μm) were acquired through each field of view and then compiled into a z-stack.
Solutions.
PSS contained 135 mmol/L NaCl, 5 mmol/L KCl, 2.5 mmol/L CaCl2, 1.2 mmol/L MgCl2, 10 mmol/L glucose, 10 mmol/L HEPES, 5 mmol/L sodium bicarbonate, and 1 mmol/L pyruvic acid (all from Sigma-Aldrich), pH adjusted to 7.4 with NaOH, with 3 μmol/L nicardipine (Sigma-Aldrich) and 1 μmol/L scopolamine (Sigma-Aldrich) to inhibit smooth muscle contractions. ATP, epibatidine, norepinephrine (NE), neuropeptide Y (NPY), somatostatin (SST), and hexamethonium (Sigma-Aldrich) were dissolved in buffer and bath applied. Capsaicin (Sigma-Aldrich) stock was prepared in 100% EtOH and then dissolved in buffer (final concentration of EtOH was 0.01%).
Data analysis.
Enteric glia were identified as described by Gulbransen and Sharkey (2009). Only glia within myenteric ganglia were analyzed in this study. Regions of interest (ROIs) were drawn and relative fluorescence intensity was measured in Imaging Workbench 6 (INDEC BioSystems). The change in fluorescence after background subtraction was calculated using a modification of the method described by Takahashi et al. (1999) with ΔF/F = ((F1 − F0)/F0)ROI − ((F1 − F0)/F0)background, where F1 is the fluorescence at any given point and F0 is the baseline fluorescence. This modification was necessary to reduce noise from fluorescence changes in the muscle layer underlying the myenteric plexus. Analysis and generation of traces were performed using Prism 4 software (Graphpad Software). Traces represent the mean ± SEM response of all glial or neuronal ROIs within a single ganglion. Statistical differences were determined by either ANOVA or t test analysis with a p value of <0.05 considered significant.
Responses were determined as increases in intracellular calcium >3 SDs from baseline (calculated as the average ratio during the 30 s preceding stimulus application). Responses are represented as the percentage of the 100 μmol/L ATP response in the same ganglion except the frequency range data that are expressed as the percentage of the response at 20 Hz. Values are reported as mean ± SEM.
Results
Enteric ganglia are innervated by enteric, sympathetic, parasympathetic, and primary afferent neurons whose axons travel between enteric ganglia in interganglionic fiber tracts. Electrical stimulation of all nerves within an interganglionic fiber tract elicits [Ca2+]i responses in enteric glia mediated by neuronal ATP (Gulbransen and Sharkey, 2009). All neuronal types innervating the enteric nervous system have the potential to release ATP so it is unknown whether glia respond to general neuronal activity or whether activity in a specific pathway specifically targets glia. To determine whether a specific subset of neurons signals to enteric glia, we used pharmacological and surgical techniques to selectively activate or eliminate each population of neurons innervating the myenteric plexus and examined the effect on glial [Ca2+]i responses.
Cholinergic activation of enteric neurons
The activation of nicotinic receptors is necessary for fast intrinsic synaptic communication in the myenteric plexus (Galligan and Bertrand, 1994). To determine whether ACh released from the nerve endings of interganglionic fibers is necessary to elicit changes in glial [Ca2+]i, we examined the effects of the nicotinic receptor antagonist hexamethonium on glial [Ca2+]i responses to electrical stimulation of the interganglionic fiber tracts (FTS). Hexamethonium (100 μm) had no effect on FTS induced [Ca2+]i responses in enteric glia (Fig. 1B,C). Average glial responses to FTS under control conditions (42.0 ± 10.1%, n = 26 ganglia) are not significantly different from glial FTS responses in the presence of hexamethonium (37.2 ± 6.5%, n = 19 ganglia) (two-tailed t test, p = 0.71). This observation indicates that nicotinic transmission is not required for FTS activation of enteric glia.
Although nicotinic transmission between enteric neurons is not necessary for glial activation, direct cholinergic activation of enteric neurons could release substances that activate enteric glia (White, 1982). To test whether activation of enteric neurons leads to glial [Ca2+]i responses, we stimulated enteric neurons with the nicotinic agonist epibatidine (300 nm). Bath application of epibatidine at slow perfusion speeds slowly raises the concentration of drug, desensitizing nicotinic receptors before responses are initiated (data not shown). To prevent desensitization of nicotinic receptors, the flow rate of the perfusion system was increased to speed delivery and removal of epibatidine. Fast application of epibatidine initiates robust and repeatable [Ca2+]i responses in enteric neurons (Fig. 2A,B). Epibatidine is a more effective stimulant of enteric neurons than ATP, stimulating peak [Ca2+]i responses that are on average 63.2 ± 20% larger than peak neuronal [Ca2+]i responses to ATP (n = 22 ganglia, 4 animals). We confirmed the specificity of epibatidine for nicotinic receptors by blocking neuronal epibatidine responses with the nicotinic receptor antagonist hexamethonium (100 μm) (Fig. 2B).
Although epibatidine stimulates large [Ca2+]i responses in enteric neurons, only very small [Ca2+]i responses are detected in enteric glia. Of the 22 myenteric ganglia challenged with epibatidine, glia in 19 responded significantly above baseline. On average, epibatidine stimulates peak [Ca2+]i responses in glia that are 7.2 ± 0.9% as large as ATP responses (n = 22 ganglia, 4 animals) (Fig. 2A,B). This small response may be attributable to responses in neuronal elements running over or under glial ROIs in the preparation because no obvious glia [Ca2+]i responses were observed during these experiments. Therefore, cholinergic nicotinic activation of enteric neurons is not sufficient to elicit glial [Ca2+]i responses of a similar magnitude to those generated by FTS.
Stimulation of primary afferent nerves
Activation or blockade of intrinsic enteric pathways had no effect on glial [Ca2+]i responses. Therefore, we hypothesized that extrinsic neurons signal to enteric glia. First, we asked whether stimulation of primary afferent nerves could activate glial [Ca2+]i responses. In the enteric nervous system, primary afferent nerves can be differentiated from other neuronal types by the expression of TRPV1 receptors. The majority of colonic afferents are TRPV1 immunoreactive, and stimulation of TRPV1 receptors initiates action potentials and/or calcium influx in sensory neurons (Robinson et al., 2004; Brierley et al., 2005; Malin et al., 2009). Restricted expression of TRPV1 allowed us to selectively stimulate primary afferent nerves with the TRPV1 agonist capsaicin (50 μm).
Bath application of capsaicin stimulates fast, transient [Ca2+]i responses in enteric neurons (Fig. 3). Neuronal [Ca2+]i responses to capsaicin are smaller in amplitude than neuronal [Ca2+]i responses simulated by ATP, and, on average, capsaicin stimulates peak [Ca2+]i responses 30.5 ± 8.8% as large those initiated by ATP (n = 10 ganglia, 4 animals) (Fig. 3). Capsaicin also initiates muscle contractions in the layer of longitudinal muscle behind the myenteric plexus in our preparations. However, capsaicin does not stimulate glial [Ca2+]i responses significantly above vehicle control (n = 19 ganglia, 4 animals; ANOVA, p > 0.05) (Fig. 3).
Chemical sympathectomy
Because activation of enteric neurons and extrinsic primary afferent nerves did not activate enteric glial [Ca2+]i responses, we hypothesized that ATP is released from extrinsic autonomic neurons. In the guinea pig distal colon, the majority of extrinsic innervation is from sympathetic adrenergic nerves (Olsson et al., 2006). To determine the contribution of sympathetic nerves in glial activation, we used the neurotoxin 6-OHDA to selectively eliminate noradrenergic neurons. Systemic administration of 6-OHDA destroys the majority of adrenergic terminals in the myenteric plexus of the guinea pig (Qayyum, 1976; Gershon et al., 1980, 1990). In agreement, we find that treatment with 6-OHDA greatly reduces the occurrence of TH-IR nerve fibers within the myenteric plexus (Fig. 4A). There was however, sparse TH-IR innervation of the myenteric plexus remaining after 6-OHDA treatment, indicating that this treatment was not totally effective in our hands and as previously shown by Gershon et al. (1990).
The myenteric plexus of sympathectomized animals is structurally indistinguishable from control animals, and glial responses to ATP in sympathectomized tissue (mean peak response from n = 23 ganglia of 0.62 ± 0.07 ΔF/F) are not significantly different (two-tailed t test, p = 0.4276) than in control tissue (mean peak response from n = 25 ganglia of 0.69 ± 0.07 ΔF/F). However, sympathectomy significantly reduces the glial FTS [Ca2+]i response amplitude by ∼55% from 32.7 ± 4.1% of the ATP amplitude in control tissue (n = 25 ganglia, 4 animals) to 18.1 ± 1.8% in sympathectomized tissue (n = 24 ganglia, 3 animals) (two-tailed t test, p = 0.002). Therefore, sympathetic nerve fibers are responsible for a significant component of FTS responses in enteric glia.
Extrinsic denervation
Treatment with 6-OHDA only removes noradrenergic sympathetic fibers. Because this treatment significantly decreased, but did not totally eliminate, glial FTS responses, we hypothesized that another population of extrinsic nerve fibers (parasympathetic or primary afferent) may contribute to FTS responses in enteric glia. To test this hypothesis, we surgically severed the periarterial nerves innervating a section of colon and assayed the ability of FTS to elicit glial responses after sufficient time for extrinsic nerves to degenerate. Surgical denervation, like 6-OHDA treatment, substantially reduces the occurrence of TH-IR nerve fibers in the myenteric plexus, whereas PGP9.5-IR enteric neurons remain intact (Fig. 4B,C).
Similarly to 6-OHDA treated tissue, glial FTS [Ca2+]i response amplitude is reduced by ∼70% from 29.5 ± 2.9% of the ATP amplitude in control tissue (n = 15 ganglia, 4 animals) to 9.1 ± 1.2% in denervated tissue (n = 14 ganglia, 4 animals) (two-tailed t test, p < 0.0001). The glial FTS [Ca2+]i response amplitude in denervated tissue is not significantly different from that in 6-OHDA-treated tissue (ANOVA, p > 0.05), suggesting that other classes of extrinsic nerves do not significantly contribute to glial FTS responses.
Frequency dependence of fiber-tract-stimulated responses in enteric glia
The release of neurotransmitters (ATP vs norepinephrine) from sympathetic varicosities varies with stimulation frequency (Stjarne, 1989; Spencer et al., 1999; Todorov et al., 1999). If enteric glia are activated by sympathetic neurons, activation of enteric glia by FTS should follow the same frequency dependence. Therefore, we tested the effect of varying stimulation frequency on glial activation.
Stimulation at 2 Hz elicits only rare, small-amplitude responses in enteric glia that are on average 39.5 ± 5.7% as large as responses elicited by 20 Hz stimulation (n = 7 ganglia). Increasing stimulation frequency to 10 Hz stimulates glial responses that are 113.1 ± 10.6% as large as responses elicited at 20 Hz (n = 7). Responses elicited by stimulation at 2 Hz are significantly smaller than those elicited by stimulation at 10 and 20 Hz (ANOVA, p < 0.0001), but responses stimulated at 10 and 20 Hz are not significantly different (ANOVA, p > 0.05).
Enteric glial responses to sympathetic neurotransmitters
Our data strongly suggest that sympathetic nerve fibers release substances that stimulate [Ca2+]i responses in enteric glia. Although we demonstrated previously that FTS stimulates a neuronal release of ATP that stimulates enteric glia, other sympathetic neurotransmitters may contribute to glial [Ca2+]i responses. Therefore, we tested whether the sympathetic cotransmitters NE, NPY, and SST could elicit [Ca2+]i responses in enteric glia.
Bath application of NE (100 μm) stimulates a pronounced [Ca2+]i response in cells lining blood vessels, followed by vessel constriction (Fig. 5A). NE-induced [Ca2+]i responses also occur in cells (possibly interstitial cells of Cajal) between the myenteric plexus and longitudinal muscle. However, NE fails to elicit [Ca2+]i responses in enteric glia within the myenteric plexus (n = 17 ganglia from 3 animals) (Fig. 5B). NPY (1 μm) and SST (1 μm) are also ineffective in stimulating glial [Ca2+]i responses within the myenteric plexus (n = 8 ganglia from 2 animals for NPY and n = 6 ganglia from 2 animals for SST) (Fig. 5C,D). NPY-stimulated [Ca2+]i responses do, however, occur in glia within the tertiary plexus (data not shown).
Discussion
Our observations provide the first evidence that peripheral glia integrate synaptic information. Specifically, our data suggest that enteric glia can discern activity in adjacent neural pathways innervating the myenteric plexus and selectively respond to postganglionic sympathetic neurons. Activation of intrinsic enteric neural circuits does not activate glial Ca2+ responses, and fast enteric neurotransmission is not necessary for initiation of glial FTS responses. However, ablating extrinsic innervation significantly reduces glial Ca2+ responses. The findings that equivalent reduction in glial responses is obtained by selectively ablating sympathetic fibers, glial FTS responses follow the same frequency-dependent profile as neurotransmitter release from sympathetic nerves, and glia are not activated by primary afferent stimulation strongly suggest that sympathetic nerves are primarily responsible for evoked responses in enteric glia. Furthermore, the only sympathetic neurotransmitter that elicits Ca2+ responses in enteric glia is ATP. Our previous findings demonstrate that enteric glial responses to ATP and FTS are mediated by P2Y4 receptors (Gulbransen and Sharkey, 2009). Therefore, we propose a model whereby sympathetic stimulation in the colonic myenteric plexus releases norepinephrine, inhibiting enteric neurons via presynaptic adrenergic receptors (Hirst and McKirdy, 1974) and ATP that acts at stimulatory P2Y4 receptors on enteric glia (Fig. 6).
Our observations provide new insights into the interactions between autonomic neurons and peripheral glia and provide a novel signaling pathway to control gastrointestinal function. Importantly, we demonstrate that enteric glia are specifically targeted by discrete neuronal populations. Presumably, electrical stimulation activates all neuronal fibers within the interganglionic fiber tracts, and, because ATP is present in all cells (Pankratov et al., 2006), any neuronal component of the ENS has the potential to release ATP. If enteric glia merely serve a supporting role for neurons, it might be expected that general neuronal activity would activate enteric glia. However, modulation of enteric neurotransmission by enteric glia would necessitate that glia detect and differentiate the activity of specific synapses. Functional evidence in the CNS suggests that astrocytes modulate the activity of individual synapses (Gordon et al., 2009). Astrocytes discriminate activity in adjacent neural pathways that use different neurotransmitters (Araque et al. 2002) and the activity of pathways that use common neurotransmitters (Perea and Araque, 2005; Schipke et al. 2008). In the ENS, morphological evidence by Gabella (1981) demonstrates enteric glia are “innervated” by a specific type of vesicle-containing axon, suggesting that enteric glia, like astrocytes, are selectively activated by a specific neural pathway.
An alternate interpretation of our findings is that ATP is not the primary signal from nerves but is in fact a secondary signal used by glia to propagate calcium responses. Much like in CNS astrocytes, propagating calcium waves have been reported in cultured enteric glia in response to mechanical stimulation (Zhang et al., 2003). Furthermore, guinea pig enteric glia express mGluR5 receptors, raising the possibility that they may respond to glutamate (Nasser et al., 2007). There are, however, several observations that argue against this scenario in our preparations. First, calcium waves propagating through the enteric glial network have never been observed in situ. In the CNS (either in situ or in vivo), astrocyte calcium responses generated by neuronal activity typically are refined to discrete astrocytes (Schummers et al., 2008; Gordon et al., 2009). In agreement, we find that enteric glial responses to neuronal stimulation do not propagate in a wave-like manner throughout the ganglia or to adjacent ganglia. Second, although guinea pig enteric glia express mGluR5 receptors, stimulation with mGluR agonists (in our hands) does not initiate glial calcium responses (our unpublished observations). In agreement with our findings in situ, Kimball and Mulholland (1996) reported that cultured guinea pig myenteric glia do not respond to glutamate. We also fail to detect enteric glial calcium responses to norepinephrine and muscarinic receptor agonists (our unpublished observation). Although it is possible that another, yet to be identified, neurotransmitter initiates glial calcium responses, we believe that our current data most strongly supports the hypothesis that ATP is responsible for enteric neuron–glia signaling.
Nicotinic stimulation only elicited small Ca2+ responses in enteric glia, and nicotinic signaling was not required for evoked glial Ca2+ responses. This was surprising because the majority of fast excitatory neurotransmission in the myenteric plexus is cholinergic and ATP is a cotransmitter at many cholinergic synapses (LePard and Galligan, 1999; Nurgali et al., 2003). White (1982) demonstrated that nicotinic agonists stimulate ATP release from myenteric varicosities. However, when varicosities were isolated from guinea pigs pretreated with 6-OHDA, acetylcholine-evoked ATP release was drastically reduced (White and Al-Humayyd, 1983). This suggests that much of the ATP release triggered by nicotinic agonists in the myenteric plexus is mediated by sympathetic varicosities and not enteric neurons. Therefore, the small glial responses observed in response to the nicotinic agonist epibatidine may be attributable to sympathetically released ATP.
Our finding that capsaicin did not elevate glial Ca2+ is at odds with the findings of Sharkey et al. (1999) who showed that intraluminal capsaicin induced c-Fos expression in myenteric glia. Although we did not observe glial Ca2+ elevations in response to capsaicin in the present study, this discrepancy is likely attributable to capsaicin stimulating a colo-colonic reflex in vivo through the inferior mesenteric ganglion (IMG) (Maggi et al., 1987; Lomax et al., 2010). Axon collaterals from colonic TRPV1-positive primary afferent fibers make excitatory synapses in the guinea pig IMG (Crowcroft et al., 1971). Therefore, in vivo, capsaicin can stimulate the sympathetic supply to the colon, whereas in vitro this circuit is severed.
Chemical sympathectomy with 6-OHDA and surgical denervation of the colon both significantly reduced FTS-induced glial Ca2+ responses. Neither treatment, however, completely eliminated glial responses. The residual responses are likely attributable to incomplete denervation because neither surgical denervation nor 6-OHDA treatment completely eliminated TH immunoreactivity. An alternate explanation is that another neuronal population (i.e., enteric) does contribute to the enteric glia FTS response and that our current stimulation protocols have failed to adequately stimulate neuron-to-glia signaling in this population. Although our results demonstrate that FTS responses in glia depend on intact sympathetic innervation, we have not demonstrated that selective stimulation of sympathetic neurons stimulates glial Ca2+ responses. The conditions of ATP release in the myenteric plexus are currently unknown, however, and we aim to address this in future studies.
To date, the sympathetic nervous system was thought to primarily innervate glands, muscle, blood vessels, lymphoid tissue, and enteric neurons. In the myenteric plexus of the gastrointestinal tract, sympathetic stimulation releases NE and the cotransmitter ATP (Al-Humayyd and White, 1985). Although NE is thought to inhibit enteric neurons via presynaptic adrenergic receptors (Hirst and McKirdy, 1974; Tack and Wood, 1992; Spencer et al., 1999; Stebbing et al., 2001), the role of sympathetic ATP release is less clearly defined (Venkova and Krier, 1993; Kadowaki et al., 2003). Our results suggest that sympathetic varicosities release ATP to activate enteric glia. Although the physiological consequence of sympathetic neuron-to-enteric glia signaling is unknown, recruitment of glia may be a general feature of noradrenergic signaling throughout the nervous system. Kulik et al. (1999) demonstrated that Bergmann glia in the cerebellum respond to synaptically released noradrenalin. Similar observations were reported after stimulation of the locus ceruleus (Bekar et al., 2008). Therefore, it is tempting to suggest that neuronal responses to stressful situations require glial recruitment. This glial recruitment could function to coordinate the activity of central and enteric neural circuits. In the CNS, astrocytes coordinate network activity by regulating extracellular adenosine. Astrocyte-derived adenosine exists tonically in the CNS and acts to inhibit neurons presynaptically (Wu and Saggau, 1994). Neuronal activity in a single pathway activates astrocytes, causing adenosine levels to increase and inhibit adjacent nonstimulated pathways (Pascual et al., 2005; Serrano et al., 2006). Similar to CNS adenosine, basal norepinephrine release from sympathetic fibers exerts a tonic inhibitory tone on myenteric neurons (Yuyama et al., 2002). Brief bursts of sympathetic activity initiate fast, transient, ATP release, followed by slower, prolonged, norepinephrine release (Machaly et al., 1988; Todorov et al., 1999). Sympathetic ATP could quickly activate enteric glia, uniformly inhibiting the myenteric plexus before norepinephrine is released. This would be especially important in an organ like the gut in which coordinated output is essential for proper function.
Alternatively, sympathetic neurons may activate enteric glia to sustain enteric neurons during hypoxic periods. Sympathetic stimulation constricts intestinal arterioles, reducing the supply of nutrients and oxygen to enteric neurons (Vanner and Surprenant, 1996). Similar conditions in the CNS stimulate glycolysis and lactate release from astrocytes (Gordon et al., 2008). In the gut, sympathetic stimulation would cause frequent hypoxic periods. Therefore, the enteric nervous system may have evolved this mechanism to sustain neurons during sympathetic stimulation. In support of this hypothesis, myenteric neurons are rapidly lost when sympathetic neurotransmitter release is reduced during gut inflammation (Jacobson et al., 1997; Blandizzi et al., 2003; Linden et al., 2005; Motagally et al., 2009).
In conclusion, enteric glia are a novel target of the sympathetic nervous system. Enteric glia specifically respond to ATP released from sympathetic fibers innervating the myenteric plexus. These findings demonstrate that enteric glia, like CNS astrocytes, discriminate the activity of specific neural pathways.
Footnotes
This work was supported by a grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) (K.A.S.). B.D.G. holds fellowships from the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology (CAG)/CIHR/Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of Canada (CCFC) (fellowship award) and Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research (AHFMR). K.A.S. is an AHFMR Medical Scientist and holds the CCFC Chair in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Research at University of Calgary. J.S.B. is an AHFMR Senior Scholar. We thank Michelle Thacker for technical assistance during extrinsic denervation surgeries.
- Correspondence should be addressed to Brian D. Gulbransen, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Calgary, 3330 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta T2N 4N1, Canada. bgulbran{at}ucalgary.ca