Selected Grantee Publications
- Clear All
- 1 result found
- niddk
- Pediatrics
- Microscopy
Single-Cell Transcriptomics Predict Novel Potential Regulators of Acute Epithelial Restitution in the Ischemia-Injured Intestine
Rose et al., American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology. 2025.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39853303
Following ischemia in the small intestine, early barrier restoration relies on epithelial restitution to reseal the physical barrier and prevent sepsis. Pigs share a similar gastrointestinal anatomy, physiology, and microbiota with humans. Researchers used neonatal and juvenile, 2- to 6-week-old male and female Yorkshire cross pigs to determine upstream regulators of restitution. Single-cell sequencing of ischemia-injured epithelial cells demonstrated two sub-phenotypes of absorptive enterocytes, with one subset presenting a restitution phenotype. Colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF1) was the only predicted upstream regulator expressed in juvenile jejunum compared with neonatal jejunum. An in vitro scratch wound assay using IPEC-J2 cells showed that BLZ945, a colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor antagonist, inhibited restitution. Ex vivo ischemia-injured neonatal pig jejunum treated with exogenous CSF1 displayed increased barrier function. This study could inform future research focused on developing novel therapeutics for intestinal barrier injury in patients. Supported by ORIP (T32OD011130, K01OD028207), NCATS, NICHD, and NIDDK.