4.4 Article

Smooth muscle adaptation and recovery of contractility after massive small bowel resection in rats

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 237, Issue 5, Pages 578-584

Publisher

ROYAL SOC MEDICINE PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1258/ebm.2012.011338

Keywords

massive small bowel resection; muscarinic acetylcholine receptor; intestinal smooth muscle; therapeutic target; adaptation

Funding

  1. Program for Innovative Research Team of Shanghai Municipal Education Commission
  2. Special Foundation of Shanghai Municipal Public Health Bureau [LJ06021]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30772270, 81000242]
  4. Scientific Foundation of Nantong University [10Z046]

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Previous studies have suggested that massive small bowel resection (mSBR) compromises the normal intestinal processes of digestion and absorption, and requires an adaptive response to regain full function and reinstate coordinated contractile activity of the circular smooth muscle. This study was designed to investigate spontaneous contractile activity of circular smooth muscle using the mSBR rat model and to determine the functional role of M-2 and M-3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChR) in this process. Male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent an 80% proximal SBR or sham operation. Markers of adaptation, including villus and microvillus height, were analyzed by hematoxylin and eosin staining and transmission electron microscopy. Contractility was measured by attaching the distal ileum strips to strain gauge transducers and exposing the tissue to varying doses of the cholinergic agonist carbachol. Protein expressions of M-2- and M-3-mAChR in intestinal smooth muscle (ISM) were detected by Western blot. Following mSBR, the ISM showed perturbed spontaneous rhythmic contraction, irregular amplitude and slow frequency by muscle strip test. However, by two weeks after mSBR, the contractile function of circular smooth muscle was found to have returned to normal levels. Protein expression of M-2-mAChR was down-regulated following mSBR but up-regulated during the adaptive process when contractile activity of circular smooth muscle was regained. These results indicate that smooth muscle contractility was spontaneously restored in rats following mSBR, and involved the acetylcholine receptors M-2 and M-3. Thus, the disrupted contractile response of smooth muscle in short bowel syndrome may be corrected by therapeutic intervention to restore the expressions of M-2- and M-3-mAChR to pre-mSBR levels.

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