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Dedicated macrophages organize and maintain the enteric nervous system.

Maria Francesca ViolaMarta Chavero-PieresElodie ModaveMarcello DelfiniNathalie StakenborgMaria Cuende EstévezNaomi FabreIris AppeltansTobie MartensKaty VandereykenHannah TheobaldJens Van HerckPhilippe PetrySimon VerheijdenSebastiaan De SchepperAlejandro SifrimZhaoyuan LiuFlorent GinhouxMohamad AzharAndreas SchlitzerGianluca MatteoliKatrin KierdorfMarco PrinzPieter Vanden BergheThierry VoetGuy E Boeckxstaens
Published in: Nature (2023)
Correct development and maturation of the enteric nervous system (ENS) is critical for survival 1 . At birth, the ENS is immature and requires considerable refinement to exert its functions in adulthood 2 . Here we demonstrate that resident macrophages of the muscularis externa (MMϕ) refine the ENS early in life by pruning synapses and phagocytosing enteric neurons. Depletion of MMϕ before weaning disrupts this process and results in abnormal intestinal transit. After weaning, MMϕ continue to interact closely with the ENS and acquire a neurosupportive phenotype. The latter is instructed by transforming growth factor-β produced by the ENS; depletion of the ENS and disruption of transforming growth factor-β signalling result in a decrease in neuron-associated MMϕ associated with loss of enteric neurons and altered intestinal transit. These findings introduce a new reciprocal cell-cell communication responsible for maintenance of the ENS and indicate that the ENS, similarly to the brain, is shaped and maintained by a dedicated population of resident macrophages that adapts its phenotype and transcriptome to the timely needs of the ENS niche.
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