Method for detecting hyaluronan in isolated myenteric plexus ganglia of adult rat small intestine

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Abstract

The cellular components of the enteric nervous system (ENS), namely enteric neurons and glia, display plasticity and respond to environmental cues deriving from growth factors, extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules, and cell-surface molecules, both in physiological and pathological conditions. ECM, in particular, provides an important framework for the enteric microenvironment and influences the homeostasis of myenteric neuronal circuitries. Isolation of pure myenteric plexus preparations from adult tissue permits to investigate changes in the ENS involving specific ECM, such as hyaluronan. This approach is based upon the possibility to isolate myenteric ganglia from the intestinal wall of either adult animals or humans, after microdissection and subsequent enzymatic digestion of the tissue. Enteric ganglia are free of connective tissue, extracellular collagen, and blood vessels, and thus treatment of intact intestinal segments with highly purified collagenases permits ganglia isolation from the surrounding smooth muscle cells. In this chapter, we describe methods for visualizing HA in isolated primary cultures of adult rat small intestine myenteric ganglia.

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Bistoletti, M., Moretto, P., & Giaroni, C. (2019). Method for detecting hyaluronan in isolated myenteric plexus ganglia of adult rat small intestine. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1952, pp. 117–125). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-9133-4_11

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