(Press-News.org) After every meal, the intestines perform an action called peristalsis — moving food through their hollow interiors with coordinated contractions and relaxations of the smooth muscle.
For more than a century, scientists have known that nerve cells in the gut propel the colon to move, allowing the organ to perform its life-sustaining function. But exactly how these intestinal nerve cells do their job has remained elusive.
Now a new NIH-funded study led by researchers at Harvard Medical School and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai has identified the mechanism behind this phenomenon, showing that the gut’s motility is altered by exercise, pressure, and inflammation.
The study results, based on experiments in mice and published March 24 in Cell, reveal that a pressure-sensing protein called PIEZO1 — named after the Greek word for pressure and the discovery of which won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine — plays a key role both in coordinating intestinal movements and keeping inflammation in this organ at bay.
If replicated in humans, the researchers said, the findings could inform the design of precision-targeted treatments that tame intestinal inflammation and treat disorders of gut motility, such as diarrhea and constipation.
“Eventually, we might stimulate PIEZO1 to speed up excretion, block it to treat diarrhea, or use it as a novel target to treat intestinal inflammation in IBD patients,” said Ruaidhrí Jackson, assistant professor of immunology in the Blavatnik Institute at HMS and co-senior author on the study with Hongzhen Hu from the Icahn School of Medicine.
These findings, Jackson added, show how the nervous and immune systems interact in the gut to maintain healthy function and protect the organ against inflammation. The results also add to a growing body of research showing that these two systems engage in a powerful interplay in various organs, including the brain, lungs, and skin.
A long-standing mystery provides an early clue
Scientists have been long fascinated by observations that the intestines can move independently without input from the central nervous system. Indeed, dissected intestines with no connection to external nerves can still do this vital work, Jackson explained.
Researchers already knew that enteric neurons — nerve cells contained completely within the intestines — interact with smooth muscle cells to drive peristalsis, but exactly what happens at the interface remained a mystery.
As an immunologist, Jackson had previously studied the role of the PIEZO1 protein in immune cells that sense the mechanical force generated by breathing. This earlier work revealed that the protein can spur inflammation in the lungs when it senses mechanical pressure.
Jackson wondered if this protein could also be somehow involved in digestive peristalsis.
To explore this idea, researchers analyzed gene activity in mouse and human gut neurons and found that the Piezo1 gene, which produces the PIEZO1 protein, is highly active in excitatory gut neurons — those responsible for triggering muscle contractions in the intestine by releasing the chemical messenger acetylcholine, which helps nerves communicate and propels muscle movement.
By genetically modifying mice so that PIEZO1-producing neurons glowed green, the researchers confirmed that the protein was, indeed, abundant in these cells.
PIEZO1 protein acts as a pressure sensor to cause gut movement
To better understand PIEZO1’s exact role, the team tested mouse intestinal tissue under varying pressure conditions. In normal mice, the intestines contracted when pressure increased. However, in mice genetically altered to lack Piezo1, the tissue failed to contract under pressure, confirming that PIEZO1 acts as a pressure sensor, helping regulate gut movement.
Next, researchers used genetically modified mice whose gut neurons could be altered by light. When Piezo1-expressing neurons were activated by light, the mice expelled a small glass bead from their intestines twice as fast as normal mice. In another experiment, the researchers used chemicals to turn off Piezo1 neurons in the gut. In these mice, digestion slowed notably. Taken together, the findings confirmed that the protein plays a key role in controlling gut movement.
PIEZO1 responds to exercise and inflammation
Exercise has long been known to speed up bowel movement, Jackson said — a phenomenon often called the “runners’ runs” by those who practice the sport. Because exercise can increase pressure on the intestines from jostling and contact with other organs, the researchers next tested how the loss of Piezo1 might affect intestinal motility in mice.
As expected, running on a treadmill increased waste transit through the intestines in mice with functional Piezo1 genes. These mice had bowel movements after just 10 minutes of exercise. However, mice whose Piezo1 gene was turned off had no such increase in intestinal motility, suggesting the gene senses the increased intestinal pressure from exercise.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is also known to increase intestinal motility due to inflammation. To test Piezo1’s role in this condition, the researchers created mouse models of IBD. Mice with IBD whose guts had intact Piezo1 produced a bowel movement more quickly, compared with animals in which Piezo1 was inactivated.
Surprisingly, slower intestinal motility wasn’t the only side effect from losing Piezo1 —turning off the gene also worsened IBD symptoms. Compared with mice that had intact Piezo1 genes, animals without working Piezo1 lost more weight and gradually lost the layer of protective intestinal mucus and mucus-making cells that shield the walls of the colon.
The worsened inflammation in these mice appeared to be due to the loss of the naturally occurring autoinflammatory chemical acetylcholine, which is responsible for nerve signaling and smooth muscle movement.
Not only does acetylcholine stimulate smooth muscle activity, Jackson explained, it also acts as an anti-inflammatory agent. Thus, he hypothesized, the inflammation caused by IBD might spur Piezo1 to cause enteric neurons to generate excess acetylcholine in an effort to tamp down inflammation — which in turn causes the increased intestinal motility characteristic of this condition. This may also explain how inflammation of the colon tends to produce diarrhea and excessive bowel movements, the researchers added.
Finding ways to modulate Piezo1 activity might eventually be used to fight IBD inflammation, Jackson said. This approach would target Piezo1 in gut neurons to release acetylcholine. This strategy would be markedly different from the way most IBD drugs work, which is by suppressing key inflammatory proteins that can render patients vulnerable to infections.
Jackson and colleagues plan to explore the design of such therapies in future work.
Authorship, Funding, Disclosures
Additional authors on the study include Zili Xie, Lillian Rose, Jing Feng, Yonghui Zhao, Yisi Lu, Harry Kane, Timothy J. Hibberd, Xueming Hu, Zhen Wang, Kaikai Zang, Xingliang Yang, Quentin Richardson, Rahmeh Othman, Olivia Venezia, Ademi Zhakyp, Fang Gao, Nobuya Abe, Keren Vigeland, Hongshen Wang, Camren Branch, Coco Duizer, Liwen Deng, Xia Meng, Lydia Zamidar, Max Hauptschein, Ronan Bergin, Xinzhong Dong, Issac Chiu, Brian S. Kim, and Nick Spencer.
The work was supported by the NIH Directors New Innovators Program (DP2AI169979), the Paul Allen Distinguished Investigator Program, the Kenneth Rainin Innovator Award, the Crohn’s and Colitis of America Foundation Senior Research Award (959859), the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program (DGE2140743), and the Allen Discovery Center program, a Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group advised program of the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation.
Hu has served as a consultant for Formation Bio and Almirall on topics unrelated to this study, and his lab has received sponsored research from Triveni Bio. Kim is founder of KliRNA Biotech; he has served as a consultant for 23andMe, ABRAX Japan, AbbVie, Almirall, Amgen, Arcutis Biotherapeutics, Arena Pharmaceuticals, argenx, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Cara Therapeutics, Clexio Biosciences, Eli Lilly and Company, Escient Pharmaceuticals, Evommune, Galderma, Genentech, GlaxoSmithKline, Granular Therapeutics, Incyte Corporation, Innovaderm Research, Janssen, Kiniksa, LEO Pharma, Maruho, Novartis, Pfizer, Recens Medical, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Sanofi, Septerna, Triveni Bio, Vial, and WebMD; he has stock in ABRAX Japan, KliRNA Biotech, Locus Biosciences, and Recens Medical; he holds a patent for the use of JAK1 inhibitors for chronic pruritus; and he has a patent pending for the use of JAK inhibitors for interstitial cystitis.
END
Study identifies gut sensor that propels intestines to move
Protein responds to pressure, inflammation, exercise to help food pass through colon
2025-03-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Moiré than meets the eye
2025-03-24
A moiré pattern appears when you stack and rotate two copies of an image with regularly repeating shapes, turning simple patterns of squares or triangles into a groovy wave pattern that moves across the combined image in an optical delight.
Similarly, stacking single layers of sub-nanometer-thick semiconductor materials known as transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) can generate a moiré potential, and novel electronic and optoelectronic properties may emerge between the layers.
A moiré potential is a “seascape” of potential energy with regularly repeating peaks and valleys. They were previously thought to be stationary. But a team of ...
AI reshapes how we observe the stars
2025-03-24
AI tools are transforming how we observe the world around us — and even the stars beyond. Recently, an international team proved that deep learning techniques and large language models can help astronomers classify stars with high accuracy and efficiency. Their study, “Deep Learning and Methods Based on Large Language Models Applied to Stellar Light Curve Classification,” was published Feb. 26 in Intelligent Computing, a Science Partner Journal.
The team introduced the StarWhisper LightCurve series, a trio of AI models, and evaluated their performance ...
GTF3C2 promotes the proliferation of hepatocellular carcinoma cells through the USP21/MEK2/ERK1/2 pathway
2025-03-24
Background and Aims
General transcription factor IIIC subunit 2 (GTF3C2) is one of the polymerase III transcription-related factors. Previous studies have revealed that GTF3C2 is involved in regulating cell proliferation. However, the role of GTF3C2 in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains unclear. This study aimed to determine its expression, biological function, and mechanism in HCC.
Methods
The expression of GTF3C2 in HCC and non-tumor tissues, along with its clinical significance, was investigated using public databases and clinical samples. Reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase ...
Embrace change with dynamic conservation models
2025-03-24
A recent article in BioScience, the journal of the American Institute of Biological Sciences, challenges conventional conservation wisdom, suggesting that protected areas such national parks and designated wilderness areas must embrace natural landscape dynamics rather than trying to preserve static conditions and landscape features.
Dr. Gavin M. Jones (USDA Forest Service) and colleagues contend that current conservation models often resist natural ecosystem processes such as wildfire, leading to a "backfire effect" that makes ecosystems more vulnerable ...
Some depression prevention programs may not help Black youth
2025-03-24
WASHINGTON – A depression prevention program that has helped white youth wasn’t effective for Black youth, raising concerns about the need for more research to help racially diverse groups, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association.
“I was very surprised that we couldn’t help Black youth as much as white youth, and we don’t know why there was such a profound difference in the outcomes.” said lead researcher Patrick Pössel, Dr. rer. soc., a professor of counseling psychology ...
White-collar crimes: ‘Fall from grace’ and the stigma of reentry into society
2025-03-24
People convicted of federal white-collar crimes come from different social and demographic backgrounds compared to those convicted of other offenses. Typically older and from the middle class, white-collar offenders face unique challenges during reentry into society. Yet, research on how social class influences their reintegration remains scarce.
A study by Florida Atlantic University, in collaboration with the University of Cincinnati, explores these challenges, focusing on how stigma, social background and emotional factors impact white-collar offenders as they transition into society ...
Engineers develop a better way to deliver long-lasting drugs
2025-03-24
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- MIT engineers have devised a new way to deliver certain drugs in higher doses with less pain, by injecting them as a suspension of tiny crystals. Once under the skin, the crystals assemble into a drug “depot” that could last for months or years, eliminating the need for frequent drug injections.
This approach could prove useful for delivering long-lasting contraceptives or other drugs that need to be given for extended periods of time. Because the drugs are dispersed in a suspension before injection, they can be administered through a narrow needle that is easier for patients to tolerate.
“We showed that we can have very controlled, sustained delivery, ...
MIT scientists engineer starfish cells to shape-shift in response to light
2025-03-24
Life takes shape with the motion of a single cell. In response to signals from certain proteins and enzymes, a cell can start to move and shake, leading to contractions that cause it to squeeze, pinch, and eventually divide. As daughter cells follow suit down the generational line, they grow, differentiate, and ultimately arrange themselves into a fully formed organism.
Now MIT scientists have used light to control how a single cell jiggles and moves during its earliest stage of development. The team studied the motion of egg cells produced by starfish — an organism that scientists have long used as a classic model for ...
Research spotlight: A generalized epilepsy network derived from brain abnormalities and deep brain stimulation
2025-03-24
Frederic L.W.V.J. Schaper, MD, PhD, director of Epilepsy Network Mapping at the Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and an instructor of neurology at Harvard Medical School, is the senior author of a paper published in Nature Communications, “A generalized epilepsy network derived from brain abnormalities and deep brain stimulation.”
How would you summarize your study for a lay audience?
Generalized epilepsy has traditionally been considered a seizure of the ‘whole brain.’ However, new research has challenged this longstanding idea, since carefully targeting specific brain areas through deep brain stimulation ...
IMDEA Networks revolutionizes 6G networks with DISCO6G project: real-time communication and sensing
2025-03-24
IMDEA Networks has begun its participation in DISCO6G, an innovative project that will transform next-generation mobile networks, in collaboration with UC3M, UAM, and UPM and funded by the Madrid Regional Government. Its focus on Integrated Sensing and Communication (ISAC) enables network infrastructures not only to transmit information but also to function as distributed real-time sensors. "DISCO6G represents a paradigm shift, as it turns the network into a system capable of detecting its environment while ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
We are vastly overestimating the amount of fresh water available for lithium mining, new study finds
If native plants are going to survive climate change, they need our help to move—here’s how to do it safely
Blue pigment improves foundation makeup shades for dark skin
A safe nuclear battery that could last a lifetime
Making sturdy, semi-transparent wood with cheap, natural materials
Adulting is hard on the heart: Teen to young adulthood is a critical time to address risk
Study shows link between the start of the working day and time preferences
Scientists discovered chemical oscillations in palladium nanoparticles, paving the way for recycling precious metal catalysts
Tadpoles try to flee dangerous virus in their pond by growing much faster than normal
Build it and they shall come
How elephants plan their journeys: New study reveals energy-saving strategies
New study challenges the ‘monogamy-superiority myth’, as non-monogamous people report just as happy relationships and sex lives
Government of Guyana, Mount Sinai Health System and Hess Corporation announce five-year extension of national healthcare initiative.
Preclinical study: after heart attack, a boost in anti-inflammatory cells promoted healing
Glucose revealed as a master regulator of tissue regeneration in Stanford Medicine study
Open-label placebo appears to reduce premenstrual symptoms, study suggests
New mums advised to do two hours of moderate to vigorous exercise a week
Milk as Medicine: New Study Shows Breast Milk Transforms Challenges into Triumphs
CU Cancer Center researchers identify the ‘switch’ that allows intestinal cells to regenerate after injury
Special issue of Academic Emergency Medicine explores the science of errors in emergency care
Organoid fusions as models to study meninges-brain signaling
A multimodal light manipulator
OU researcher leverages technology for alcohol disorder interventions in primary care
Automated lead nurturing boosts sales—but only under the right conditions
Lessons from Venezuela’s democratic collapse: How opposition movements can defy autocratic leaders
USU ecologists document Utah's bee species and say beehive state is rich in bee diversity
A hit of dopamine tells baby birds when their song practice is paying off
Basketball analytics investment is key to NBA wins and other successes
Scientific cooperation is strategic for Brazil to strengthen relations with Europe
Engineering antibodies with a novel fusion protein
[Press-News.org] Study identifies gut sensor that propels intestines to moveProtein responds to pressure, inflammation, exercise to help food pass through colon