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Publication : Smoothelin-a is essential for functional intestinal smooth muscle contractility in mice.

First Author  Niessen P Year  2005
Journal  Gastroenterology Volume  129
Issue  5 Pages  1592-601
PubMed ID  16285958 Mgi Jnum  J:104648
Mgi Id  MGI:3612573 Doi  10.1053/j.gastro.2005.08.018
Citation  Niessen P, et al. (2005) Smoothelin-a is essential for functional intestinal smooth muscle contractility in mice. Gastroenterology 129(5):1592-601
abstractText  BACKGROUND & AIMS: In patients with chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction, intestinal motility is disturbed by either nervous or myogenic aberrations. The cause of the myogenic form is unknown, but it is likely to originate in the contractile apparatus of the smooth muscle cells. Smoothelins are actin-binding proteins that are expressed abundantly in visceral (smoothelin-A) and vascular (smoothelin-B) smooth muscle. Experimental data indicate a role for smoothelins in smooth muscle contraction. A smoothelin-deficient mouse model may help to establish the role of smoothelin-A in intestinal contraction and provide a model for myogenic chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction. METHODS: We used gene targeting to investigate the function of smoothelin-A in intestinal tissues. By deletion of exons 18, 19, and 20 from the smoothelin gene, the expression of both smoothelin isoforms was disrupted. The effects of the deficiency were evaluated by pathologic and physiologic analyses. RESULTS: In smoothelin-A/B knockout mice, the intestine was fragile and less flexible compared with wild-type littermates. The circular and longitudinal muscle layers of the intestine were hypertrophic. Deficiency of smoothelin-A led to irregular slow wave patterns and impaired contraction of intestinal smooth muscle, leading to hampered transport in vivo. This caused obstructions that provoked intestinal diverticulosis and occasionally intestinal rupture. CONCLUSIONS: Smoothelin-A is essential for functional contractility of intestinal smooth muscle. Hampered intestinal transit in smoothelin-A/B knockout mice causes obstruction, starvation, and, ultimately, premature death. The pathology of mice lacking smoothelin-A is reminiscent of that seen in patients with chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction.
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