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Macrophage-induced enteric neurodegeneration leads to motility impairment during gut inflammation

Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Breßer, Mona;
Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Siemens, Kevin D;
Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Schneider, Linda;
Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Lunnebach, Jonah E;
ORCID
0000-0002-6768-2523
Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Leven, Patrick;
ORCID
0000-0001-6996-9766
Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Glowka, Tim R;
Affiliation
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) Bonn Germany
Oberländer, Kristin;
ORCID
0000-0003-0336-8284
Affiliation
Deutsches Zentrum für Neurodegenerative Erkrankungen (DZNE). PRECISE Platform for Genomics and Epigenomics at DZNE and University of Bonn Bonn Germany
De Domenico, Elena;
Affiliation
Deutsches Zentrum für Neurodegenerative Erkrankungen (DZNE). PRECISE Platform for Genomics and Epigenomics at DZNE and University of Bonn Bonn Germany
Schultze, Joachim L;
Affiliation
Department of General, Thoracic and Vascular Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Schmidt, Joachim;
Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Kalff, Jörg C;
Affiliation
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) Bonn Germany
Schneider, Anja;
ORCID
0000-0002-8632-7631
Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Wehner, Sven;
ORCID
0000-0002-7194-2703
Affiliation
Department of Surgery University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany
Schneider, Reiner

Abstract Current studies pictured the enteric nervous system and macrophages as modulators of neuroimmune processes in the inflamed gut. Expanding this view, we investigated the impact of enteric neuron–macrophage interactions on postoperative trauma and subsequent motility disturbances, i.e., postoperative ileus. In the early postsurgical phase, we detected strong neuronal activation, followed by transcriptional and translational signatures indicating neuronal death and synaptic damage. Simultaneously, our study revealed neurodegenerative profiles in macrophage-specific transcriptomes after postoperative trauma. Validating the role of resident and monocyte-derived macrophages, we depleted macrophages by CSF-1R-antibodies and used CCR2 −/− mice, known for reduced monocyte infiltration, in POI studies. Only CSF-1R-antibody-treated animals showed decreased neuronal death and lessened synaptic decay, emphasizing the significance of resident macrophages. In human gut samples taken early and late during abdominal surgery, we substantiated the mouse model data and found reactive and apoptotic neurons and dysregulation in synaptic genes, indicating a species’ overarching mechanism. Our study demonstrates that surgical trauma activates enteric neurons and induces neurodegeneration, mediated by resident macrophages, introducing neuroprotection as an option for faster recovery after surgery.

Synopsis This study investigates the impact of myenteric neuron-macrophage interactions on postoperative trauma and subsequent motility disturbances, i.e., postoperative ileus. Gut surgical trauma activates myenteric neurons. Abdominal surgery causes enteric neurodegeneration by inducing neuron death and synaptic damage in the enteric nervous system of the small intestine. Inflammatory macrophages create a neurodegenerative environment in the gut. Depletion of resident macrophages reduces surgery-induced enteric neurodegeneration and improves clinical symptoms. Surgical patients show a comparable neurodegenerative profile in the gut.

This study investigates the impact of myenteric neuron-macrophage interactions on postoperative trauma and subsequent motility disturbances, i.e., postoperative ileus.

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