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Cysteinyl leukotrienes and acetylcholine are biliary tuft cell cotransmitters

Authors :
Maryam Keshavarz
Schayan Faraj Tabrizi
Anna-Lena Ruppert
Uwe Pfeil
Yannick Schreiber
Jochen Klein
Isabell Brandenburger
Günter Lochnit
Sudhanshu Bhushan
Alexander Perniss
Klaus Deckmann
Petra Hartmann
Mirjam Meiners
Petra Mermer
Amir Rafiq
Sarah Winterberg
Tamara Papadakis
Dominique Thomas
Carlo Angioni
Johannes Oberwinkler
Vladimir Chubanov
Thomas Gudermann
Ulrich Gärtner
Stefan Offermanns
Burkhard Schütz
Wolfgang Kummer
Publica
Source :
Science Immunology. 7
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2022.

Abstract

The gallbladder stores bile between meals and empties into the duodenum upon demand and is thereby exposed to the intestinal microbiome. This exposure raises the need for antimicrobial factors, among them, mucins produced by cholangiocytes, the dominant epithelial cell type in the gallbladder. The role of the much less frequent biliary tuft cells is still unknown. We here show that propionate, a major metabolite of intestinal bacteria, activates tuft cells via the short-chain free fatty acid receptor 2 and downstream signaling involving the cation channel transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily M member 5. This results in corelease of acetylcholine and cysteinyl leukotrienes from tuft cells and evokes synergistic paracrine effects upon the epithelium and the gallbladder smooth muscle, respectively. Acetylcholine triggers mucin release from cholangiocytes, an epithelial defense mechanism, through the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor M3. Cysteinyl leukotrienes cause gallbladder contraction through their cognate receptor CysLTR1, prompting emptying and closing. Our results establish gallbladder tuft cells as sensors of the microbial metabolite propionate, initiating dichotomous innate defense mechanisms through simultaneous release of acetylcholine and cysteinyl leukotrienes.

Subjects

Subjects :
Immunology
ddc:610
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
24709468
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....48c07dbd12a917250f8466f68032140a