NEW STUDY. Researchers at the University of Gothenburg have now shown how mucus protects the small intestine in mice. In the future, this finding may lead to new ways of preventing relapse in Crohn’s disease in humans. One method used by the scientists has been to film how the intestinal crypts become filled with mucus and expel their contents to flush bacteria out.
The film below shows how the crypt of the small intestine first fills with mucus (green) and how this is then pushed out of the crypt and cleaning it from bacteria.
Researchers at the University of Gothenburg have been studying the mucus involved in defending the intestines and airways against infection for more than 30 years. To date, their work has focused very much on the large intestine, but this study, published in Science Signaling, now shows for the first time how this mucus normally protects the crypts (invaginations) of the small intestine.
The study was conducted in tissue samples from mice and in cultured cells. It included mapping several molecular mechanisms and cellular processes that serve as important means of defending the crypts of the small intestine.
Coordinated flushing
In the mucosa of the small intestine there are small invaginations — crypts — where “goblet cells” and other specialized intestinal cells work together to flush out bacteria, thereby preventing bacteria from becoming established and invading cells.
“Our study shows that bacteria are cleared out of these crypts by cells of two types working together. Together, they cause a mucus plug to form from the mucus that’s secreted from the goblet cells and the fluid provided by adjacent cells. When the plug is pushed out, bacteria are washed out of the crypts.”
The speaker is Brendan Dolan, postdoctoral fellow from Dublin, Ireland at Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg. Using advanced microscopy, Dolan was also able to film, at cellular level, the secretion of mucus in the mucosa of the small intestine.
The study also reveals a previously unknown mechanism whereby “packaged” mucus that has formed inside cells expands inside the cell before it is released. This mucus is stored in small vesicles inside the goblet cells and, when the vesicles rupture inside the cells and fill them with the mucus, the cells vigorously and rapidly empty out their contents. At the end of this article you can see a video that shows how one goblet cell, holding small granule green mucus granule, first rupture inside the cell, followed by mucus filling the top of the cell, after which mucus is released from the cell.
New light on Crohn’s disease
The finding is relevant to Crohn’s disease, a chronic gastrointestinal disorder, since the inflammation associated with it affects the small intestine in particular. Up to 30,000 Swedes live with Crohn’s disease.
“It’s a chronic disease that’s not curable at present. We’ve known for some time that the disease starts with bacteria entering the intestinal crypts and invading the cells there. If we can understand the mechanisms of how bacteria are normally flushed away, we’ll be able to develop new therapies in order to prevent relapse in Crohn’s disease,” says Gunnar C Hansson, corresponding author of the study.
Title: Clearance of small intestinal crypts involve goblet cell mucus secretion by intracellular granule rupture and enterocyte ion transport; Science Signaling; https://doi.org/10.1126/scisignal.abl5848
BY: ELIN LINDSTRÖM