HUMAN NEWBORN AND ADULT MYENTERIC PLEXUS GROWS IN DIFFERENT PATTERNS

Citation
Kh. Schafer et P. Mestres, HUMAN NEWBORN AND ADULT MYENTERIC PLEXUS GROWS IN DIFFERENT PATTERNS, Cellular and molecular biology, 43(8), 1997, pp. 1171-1180
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Cell Biology",Biology
ISSN journal
01455680
Volume
43
Issue
8
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1171 - 1180
Database
ISI
SICI code
0145-5680(1997)43:8<1171:HNAAMP>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Whilst embedded within the gut wall the inaccessibility of the enteric nervous system (ENS) is a major drawback for the establishment of an in vitro model for the human ENS. Using a method which combines collag enase digestion, mechanical agitation and manual dissection it was pos sible to dissect myenteric plexus from human colon of patients at all ages, from newborn to old-age. While complex networks of ganglia and t heir interconnecting strands could be isolated from newborn gut, the a dult tissue allowed only single or small groups of ganglia to be disse cted coherently. Pieces of plexus were cultivated on glass coverslips or on plastic sheets respectively. Explants from newborn or older pati ents displayed different growth patterns. The cytological behaviour of the newborn explants is characterized by an intensive neurite outgrow th. After 1 to 2 days in culture, glial cells start to leave the expla nt while proliferating and forming a dense cellular carpet. The axons appear partly arranged in bundles, expanding above the glial carpet. S ingle neurites can leave the carpet and attach directly on the substra te. Semithin sections and EM studies reveal the existence of numerous neurons within the ganglia. The characteristic dense arrangement of ne urons, glial cells and neuropil of the myenteric ganglia in vivo was o nly partly conserved in newborns while in cultured adult ganglia the c ells were sparsely scattered throughout the explant with large clefts between the single cells. The ganglia of the adults do not show any co nsiderable neurite outgrowth, which correlates with the low amount of neurons within the ganglia. The migratory behaviour of the adult glial cells is rather moderate, also the proliferation rate compared to the newborn cultures. In general single cells leave the explant without f orming an glial carpet as seen in the newborn cultures. The described method delivers an in vitro paradigm for the study of human myenteric plexus. It underlines the differences in growth pattern, neurite outgr owth and glial proliferation from newborn and older children, as well as from adult patients, thus establishing a base line for future studi es.