The Role Of Prostaglandins In The Control Of Intestinal Motility In Physiological And Experimental Inflammatory States.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$316,209.00
Summary
Many intestinal disorders are due to inflammations of unknown origin, associated with pain, diarrhoea or constipation. How this occurs is not known. The movements of the intestine are due to the contractions and relaxations of the muscular wall, which are controlled by a network of nerve cells, a kind of a brain in the gut. In inflammatory conditions, a multitude of chemical substances are produced by the sick gut. Among these substances are the prostaglandins that are responsible for increasing ....Many intestinal disorders are due to inflammations of unknown origin, associated with pain, diarrhoea or constipation. How this occurs is not known. The movements of the intestine are due to the contractions and relaxations of the muscular wall, which are controlled by a network of nerve cells, a kind of a brain in the gut. In inflammatory conditions, a multitude of chemical substances are produced by the sick gut. Among these substances are the prostaglandins that are responsible for increasing pain from inflamed parts. However, the gut makes prostaglandins even when there is no inflammation, although it is not clear what do these substances do in the normal intestine. During disease, prostaglandins are made in much larger amounts. If we can establish what they do normally we may be able to establish how they work in disease. Therefore our projects is in two parts. First, we will investigate how prostaglandins normally affect the working of the nerves and muscle controlling intestinal movement. In the second part we will reveal the role of these substances during mild inflammation induced in some laboratory animals to mimic human diseases. All experiments will be carried out on intestines removed from these experimental animals after they are killed humanely. This enables us to study how the experimentally induced diseases affect gut function, especially movement. We will use a method, that has recently been developed in our laboratory, to transform video recordings of gut movements into computer-generated maps. From these pictures, we can see patterns of movement that are too subtle to detect by just watching the videos. We will end our project by establishing if and when prostaglandins are responsible for producing the abnormal intestinal movements seen in disease. This will give clinicians a better basis to develop new drugs against gut disorders.Read moreRead less
Mechanisms Regulating Nutrient Induced Motor Patterns In The Isolated Small Intestine
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$427,750.00
Summary
The movements of the small intestine are essential for the digestion and absorption of a meal and consist of two basic patterns during a 3-4 hour period after a meal. These are mixing (or segmentation) and propulsion (or peristalsis). Although it is the subject of ongoing study, much is known about the basic mechanisms that control propulsion, largely because this behaviour is readily seen in isolated segments of gut so it is possible to undertake highly controlled experiments to identify the va ....The movements of the small intestine are essential for the digestion and absorption of a meal and consist of two basic patterns during a 3-4 hour period after a meal. These are mixing (or segmentation) and propulsion (or peristalsis). Although it is the subject of ongoing study, much is known about the basic mechanisms that control propulsion, largely because this behaviour is readily seen in isolated segments of gut so it is possible to undertake highly controlled experiments to identify the various cellular components of the system. By contrast, mixing has only been reliably seen in intact animals making studies of the detailed mechanisms responsible for this behaviour much more difficult. What is known is that the composition of a meal controls the relative amount of mixing and propulsion seen at any location along the small intestine. We have recently identified a pattern of contractions in isolated small intestine (duodenum and-or jejunum) that is induced by the presence of a nutrient in the intestine and appears very similar to the mixing behaviour seen in the intact animal. We have shown that this pattern depends on the activity of nerve cells including those that excite the gut muscle and that it depends on the activity of a hormone released from the lining of the gut wall by fats and other nutrients. The aims of this proposal are to identify how nutrients interact to produce this pattern of contractions, the relative roles of specific types of nerve cells and the sites at which the local hormones released by nutrients act. This is important because increasing the proportion of mixing to propulsion enhances the absorption of nutrient from a meal, so if the mechanisms that initiate mixing behaviour can be regulated in a predictable way by specific nutrient, absorption can be enhanced in various malabsorption syndromes.Read moreRead less
Differentiation Of Respiratory Behaviour In The Mammalian Fetus
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$434,839.00
Summary
Mammalian fetuses are highly active from early in gestation, manifesting patterns of activity that are gradually transformed throughout fetal life, ultimately producing a repertoire of behaviours essential for postnatal survival. These behaviours are of fundamental importance to animals, and none more so than breathing which must perform effectively from the moment of birth. We plan to examine neural control mechanisms that transform a primitive pattern of breathing in the early gestation fetus ....Mammalian fetuses are highly active from early in gestation, manifesting patterns of activity that are gradually transformed throughout fetal life, ultimately producing a repertoire of behaviours essential for postnatal survival. These behaviours are of fundamental importance to animals, and none more so than breathing which must perform effectively from the moment of birth. We plan to examine neural control mechanisms that transform a primitive pattern of breathing in the early gestation fetus into the functional form that effectively ventilates the lungs after birth. In addition to examining the prenatal development of breathing, our program will focus on the developmental fate of a transient behaviour restricted to early development. This early behaviour plays a fundamental role in the development of the motor system before being extinguished under the influence of supraspinal inputs. This program will therefore provide a basis for understanding the mechanisms by which the brain establishes control of the motor circuits of the spinal cord during development. Further, the program is designed to provide a basis for understanding the respiratory problems so common in the preterm human infant.Read moreRead less
Spatio-temporal Analysis Of Rat Intestinal Motility In Physiological And Disease Models
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$358,750.00
Summary
This project addresses the question of how the movements of the gut are controlled in health and disease. The progress of food along the gut is due to movements of the involuntary muscle of the wall of the intestine. Three fundamental mechanisms are involved. One is the spontaneous ability of the intestinal muscle to contract rhythmically and is driven by a delicate net of pacemaker cells. Fast propulsion of food contents depends on nerve circuits in the gut wall that generate a powerful pumping ....This project addresses the question of how the movements of the gut are controlled in health and disease. The progress of food along the gut is due to movements of the involuntary muscle of the wall of the intestine. Three fundamental mechanisms are involved. One is the spontaneous ability of the intestinal muscle to contract rhythmically and is driven by a delicate net of pacemaker cells. Fast propulsion of food contents depends on nerve circuits in the gut wall that generate a powerful pumping behaviour to prevent over-filling or to eject toxic or irritating substances (eg: some laxatives activate this mechanisms). This is often called peristalsis. A third mechanism consists of activity of nerve cells in the gut, that slowly propagates along the intestine and causes the muscle to contract, sweeping along any remnants. The movements generated by these three mechanisms occur in segments of intestine isolated from rats. The major difficulty up until now has been to relate the actual movements in living animals to these fundamental mechanisms. It is now possible to bridge this gap because we have developed methods to record, display and measure graphically the actual movements. Movements are transformed into spatio-temporal maps which show all of the contractions over a period of time. Coordinated activity is visible in these maps as recognisable patterns or visual objects. Measurements can be readily made with conventional statistics. The literature in gastroenterology is full of descriptions of motility based on indirect methods of recordings. In this project we will be able to correlate the previous indirect methods with the new graphic methods and thus establish a clearer, simpler and more accurate classification of normal patterns of intestinal motility. We will then use this to establish what goes wrong in a number of experimental diseases known to affect adversely the movements of the intestine.Read moreRead less
Effects Of Ischemia/ Reperfusion Injury On Enteric Neurons And Neuroprotective Strategies
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$566,277.00
Summary
The intestine can suffer restricted blood flow, creating a region of damaged or dead bowel. This leads to severe medical emergencies, complications and even death. Loss of blood flow and damage can be a serious complication for intestinal transplant surgery, which compromises patient survival and recovery. The project brings together transplant surgeons and basic scientists to solve problems caused by intestinal ischemia. A major result will be to improve outcomes for Australian patients
The Role Of Transferrin Receptor, Divalent Metal Transporter, Ferroportin And Hemochromatosis Protein In Iron Absorption
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$195,990.00
Summary
Within Australia 1 in 300 people of Caucasian origin have a genetic defect which makes them absorb more iron from the diet than they need. Excess iron is a major problem because it damages cells and this is most obvious in the pancreas where the cells make insulin are destroyed and diabetes mellitus develop. In the liver cirrhosis and cancer often occur. Iron also accumulates in other tissues such as the heart and joints resulting in damage to these organs. The genetic defect has recently been i ....Within Australia 1 in 300 people of Caucasian origin have a genetic defect which makes them absorb more iron from the diet than they need. Excess iron is a major problem because it damages cells and this is most obvious in the pancreas where the cells make insulin are destroyed and diabetes mellitus develop. In the liver cirrhosis and cancer often occur. Iron also accumulates in other tissues such as the heart and joints resulting in damage to these organs. The genetic defect has recently been identified but how the defective protein causes the cells of the intestine to absorb more iron into the body than is needed remains unknown. This has led to the idea that the normal protein is responsible for controlling the amount of iron absorbed. Recent studies have shown a link between this protein and another called transferrin receptor. These two molecules are thought to co-operate in determining how much iron will be absorbed. Once this is determined other molecules called iron transporters are produced and these are responsible for moving the iron from the intestine into the blood. When not much iron is required only a small number of transporters are made and when more iron is required then many more are produced. How these transporters program the level of iron absorption is unknown but the process probably involves the transferrin receptor and the hemochromatosis protein. This project will investigate the function of the molecules that determine the programe for how much iron is to be absorbed, and secondly how this is linked to the production and movement of the transproters that co-ordinate this function.Read moreRead less