Modulation of Colonic Response to Stress by Peripheral CRF2 Receptors
University Of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles CA
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Abstract
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): IBS patients have recurrent abdominal pain associated with altered bowel habits. The mechanisms of IBS are poorly understood and therapies are lacking. A compromised stress response is a key risk factors for IBS. The primary mediator of stress is the peptide cortocotropin releasing factor (CRF). In the last granting period we have shown that in contrast to CRF1, CRF2 receptors suppress the colonic sensorimotor responses and that a compromised CRF2 function exacerbates the colonic response to stress. The mechanism how CRF2 mediates stress resiliency in the colon is not known. In preliminary data, we show that a) CRF2 activates colonic neuronal NOS and NO release and involves VIP to inhibit colonic motor response, b) human tau- overexpressing mice display altered colonic response to mild stress and c) CRF2 but not CRF1 activation suppresses stress or CRF-induced enteric and primary afferent neuronal tau phosphorylation. Based on data from last grant and the preliminary data, we hypothesize that CRF2 in the colon subserves a stress-coping function through activation of enteric NO and modulation of neuronal tau, a novel enteric stress pathway, and that altered CRF2 signaling will lead to maladaptive colonic sensorimotor responses to stress. This will be tested under three aims. Aim 1 will determine the functional interaction of the CRF2-NO-VIP triad. CRF2 mediated molecular activation of nNOS, NO release, VIP activation and colonic contraction in vivo will be monitored in naive and stressed rats. Regulation of colonic CRF2 receptor splices variants under stress will be assessed to determine variants that are associated with perturbed colonic motor homeostasis Aim 2 will characterize a novel stress-tau-gut pathway and will dissect the effects and mechanism of stress-induced enteric neuronal tau modulation in rats. The identity of colonic enteric neurons with tau phophorylation, the colonic reflex and the suppression of stress-induced tau phophorylation by CRF2 will be investigated. Aim 3 will test the hypothesis that stress or CRF-induced modulation of visceral nociception involves enteric and spinal neuronal tau phosphorylation. Myenteric and DRG neuronal tau and neuronal excitability along with visceral nocicption in stressed and non-stressed rats will be assessed. Whether the CRF2 mediated suppression of visceral nociception is associated with the suppression of tau phosphorylation will be determined. Enteric and spinal tau modulation and site specific deletion of CRF2 (siRNA) will be used. Overall, the studies will use pharmacological, genetic, tissue, cellular and molecular tools to dissect the mechanisms how CRF2 receptor activation suppresses stress-related colonic sensorimotor responses. Unraveling these CRF2 mediated mechanisms in the gut response to stress will have significant impact in the understanding of stress-induced gut sensorimotor alteration and in guiding future novel therapeutic approaches to stress related diseases such as IBS.
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