Intestinal stem cells respond to food by supersizing the gut
By By Robert Sanders | 29 Oct 2011
A new study from University of California, Berkeley, researchers demonstrates that adult stem cells can reshape our organs in response to changes in the body and the environment, a finding that could have implications for diabetes and obesity.
But in working with fruit flies, the researchers found that intestinal stem cells responded to increased food intake by producing more intestinal cells, expanding the size of the intestines as long as the food keeps flowing.
''When flies start to eat, the intestinal stem cells go into overdrive, and the gut expands,'' said UC Berkeley post-doctoral fellow Lucy O'Brien. ''Four days later, the gut is four times bigger than before, but when food is taken away, the gut slims down.''
Just as in humans and other mammals, O'Brien added, the fly intestine secretes its own insulin. In flies, intestinal insulin seems to be the signal that makes stem cells ''supersize the gut.''
''Because of the many similarities between the fruit fly and the human, the discovery may hold a key to understanding how human organs adapt to environmental change,'' said David Bilder, UC-Berkeley associate professor of molecular and cell biology.
The research was published in the October 28 issue of the journal Cell.
Experiments such as this ''could provide important insights into the therapeutic use of stem cells for treatment of different gastrointestinal and metabolic disorders such as diabetes,'' wrote Abby Sarka and Konrad Hochedlinger of Harvard University in a Cell perspective accompanying the publication.
Many tissues grow or shrink with usage, including muscle, liver and intestine. Human intestines, for example, regrow after portions have been surgically removed because of cancer or injury, and hibernating animals see their intestines shrink to one-third their normal size during winter.
''One strategy animals use to deal with environmental variability is to tune the workings of their organ systems to match the conditions at hand,'' O'Brien said. ''How exactly this 'organ adaptation' happens, particularly in adult animals that are no longer growing, has long been a mystery.''
Following the surprising discovery of stem cells in the intestines of fruit flies five years ago, O'Brien and Bilder decided to investigate the role of adult stem cells in normal intestinal growth in hopes of finding clues to their role in vertebrates like us.
''I looked at stained stem cells in the fruit fly intestine, and they are studded throughout like jewels. The tissues were so beautiful, I knew I had to study them,'' O'Brien said.
O'Brien, Bilder and their colleagues discovered that when fruit flies feed, their intestines secrete insulin locally, which stimulates intestinal stem cells to divide and produce more intestinal cells.
''The real surprise was that the fruit fly intestine is capable of secreting its own insulin,'' BIlder said. ''This intestinal insulin spikes immediately after feeding and talks directly to stem cells, so the intestine controls its own adaptation.''
Stem cells can divide either asymmetrically, producing one stem cell and one intestinal cell, or symmetrically, producing two stem cells. The team found that, in response to food, intestinal stem cells underwent symmetric division more frequently than asymmetric division, which had the effect of maintaining the proportion of stem cells to intestinal cells, and is a more efficient way of ramping up the total number of cells, O'Brien said.
''Adaptive resizing of the intestine makes sense from the standpoint of physiological fitness,'' she said. ''Upkeep of the intestinal lining is metabolically expensive, consuming up to 30 per cent of the body's energy resources. By minimising intestinal size when food is scarce, and maximising digestive capacity when food is abundant, adaptive intestinal resizing by stem cells helps animals survive in constantly changing environments.''
But in working with fruit flies, the researchers found that intestinal stem cells responded to increased food intake by producing more intestinal cells, expanding the size of the intestines as long as the food keeps flowing.
''When flies start to eat, the intestinal stem cells go into overdrive, and the gut expands,'' said UC Berkeley post-doctoral fellow Lucy O'Brien. ''Four days later, the gut is four times bigger than before, but when food is taken away, the gut slims down.''
Just as in humans and other mammals, O'Brien added, the fly intestine secretes its own insulin. In flies, intestinal insulin seems to be the signal that makes stem cells ''supersize the gut.''
''Because of the many similarities between the fruit fly and the human, the discovery may hold a key to understanding how human organs adapt to environmental change,'' said David Bilder, UC-Berkeley associate professor of molecular and cell biology.
Cells in the adult fly midgut. The intestinal cells are outlined in red and have large blue nuclei. The stem cells are tiny and colored green (their nuclei are not visible). (Image by Lucy O'Brien and David Bilder, UC Berkeley) |
Experiments such as this ''could provide important insights into the therapeutic use of stem cells for treatment of different gastrointestinal and metabolic disorders such as diabetes,'' wrote Abby Sarka and Konrad Hochedlinger of Harvard University in a Cell perspective accompanying the publication.
Many tissues grow or shrink with usage, including muscle, liver and intestine. Human intestines, for example, regrow after portions have been surgically removed because of cancer or injury, and hibernating animals see their intestines shrink to one-third their normal size during winter.
''One strategy animals use to deal with environmental variability is to tune the workings of their organ systems to match the conditions at hand,'' O'Brien said. ''How exactly this 'organ adaptation' happens, particularly in adult animals that are no longer growing, has long been a mystery.''
After feeding, fruit fly intestines release insulin to kick stem cells (triangular cells) into overdrive to produce more intestinal cells (oblong cells) and more adult stem cells. (Courtesy of Cell) |
''I looked at stained stem cells in the fruit fly intestine, and they are studded throughout like jewels. The tissues were so beautiful, I knew I had to study them,'' O'Brien said.
O'Brien, Bilder and their colleagues discovered that when fruit flies feed, their intestines secrete insulin locally, which stimulates intestinal stem cells to divide and produce more intestinal cells.
''The real surprise was that the fruit fly intestine is capable of secreting its own insulin,'' BIlder said. ''This intestinal insulin spikes immediately after feeding and talks directly to stem cells, so the intestine controls its own adaptation.''
Stem cells can divide either asymmetrically, producing one stem cell and one intestinal cell, or symmetrically, producing two stem cells. The team found that, in response to food, intestinal stem cells underwent symmetric division more frequently than asymmetric division, which had the effect of maintaining the proportion of stem cells to intestinal cells, and is a more efficient way of ramping up the total number of cells, O'Brien said.
''Adaptive resizing of the intestine makes sense from the standpoint of physiological fitness,'' she said. ''Upkeep of the intestinal lining is metabolically expensive, consuming up to 30 per cent of the body's energy resources. By minimising intestinal size when food is scarce, and maximising digestive capacity when food is abundant, adaptive intestinal resizing by stem cells helps animals survive in constantly changing environments.''