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A sexually dimorphic effect of cholera toxin: rapid changes in colonic motility mediated via a 5-HT3 receptor-dependent pathway in female C57Bl/6 mice

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 04:49 authored by Balasuriya Mudiyanselage Gayathri Kumari Balasuriya, Elisa HillElisa Hill, Michael Gershon, Joel Bornstein
Extensive studies of the mechanisms responsible for the hypersecretion produced by cholera toxin (CT) have shown that this toxin produces a massive over-activation of enteric neural secretomotor circuits. The effects of CT on gastrointestinal motility, however, have not been adequately characterized. We investigated effects of luminal CT on neurally mediated motor activity in ex vivo male and female mouse full length colon preparations. We used video recording and spatiotemporal maps of contractile activity to quantify colonic migrating motor complexes (CMMCs) and resting colonic diameter. We compared effects of CT in female colon from wild-type and mice lacking tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH1KO). We also compared CMMCs in colons of female mice in oestrus with those in prooestrus. In female (but not male) colon, CT rapidly, reversibly and concentration-dependently inhibits CMMC frequency and induces a tonic constriction. These effects were blocked by granisetron (5-HT3 antagonist) and were absent from TPH1KO females. CT effects were prominent at oestrus but absent at prooestrus. The number of EC cells containing immunohistochemically demonstrable serotonin (5-HT) was 30% greater in female mice during oestrus than during prooestrus or in males. We conclude that CT inhibits CMMCs via release of mucosal 5-HT, which activates an inhibitory pathway involving 5-HT3 receptors. This effect is sex-and oestrous cycle-dependent and is probably due to an oestrous cycle-dependent change in the number of 5-HT-containing EC cells in the colonic mucosa.

History

Journal

Journal of Physiology

Volume

594

Issue

15

Start page

4325

End page

4338

Total pages

14

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 The Authors, The Physiological Society

Former Identifier

2006074237

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-08-01

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