Induction and Evolution of Metaplasia in the Stomach

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $472,614 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Atrophic gastritis (parietal cell loss or oxyntic atrophy) is considered the most common precursor to gastric cancer in humans. Chronic infection with Helicobacter pylori represents the most common cause of atrophy. In the stomach, metaplasia arises following parietal cell loss. Two types of metaplasia occur in he human stomach: intestinal metaplasia (the presence of intestinal goblet cell lineages in the stomach) and Spasmolytic Polypeptide-Expressing Metaplasia or SPEM (the presence of deep antral gland type mucus cells in the stomach corpus). Investigations over the past decade have led to the recognition that SPEM lineages are substantially derived from transdifferentiation of protein-secreting chief cells into mucus-secreting metaplastic lineages. SPEM represents an initial metaplastic response to acute injuries in the stomach. However, progression of SPEM to more intestinalized and proliferative lineages requires the influence of M2- macrophages. With chronic inflammation in the stomach, SPEM appears to evolve into intestinal metaplasia. Our recent investigations have also determined that activation of Ras is critical at all stages of metaplasia evolution from initial transdifferentiation of SPEM, to promotion of proliferative SPEM, and to emergence of intestinal metaplasia. Thus, critical extrinsic immune factors and intrinsic epithelial Ras signaling combine to promote the evolution and expansion of metaplasia in the stomach. We have therefore hypothesized that immune cell populations drive both the induction of SPEM and the progression of metaplasia. To evaluate this hypothesis, we will examine two specific aims: First, we will examine the role of intrinsic immune cells (ILC2s) in the gastric mucosa on the induction of metaplasia. Our previous investigations have implicated a cascade of IL-33 to IL-13 in the induction of metaplasia in the corpus of the stomach. Since intrinsic immune ILC2s are thought to represent the major population of cells responsible for secretion of IL-13, we will seek to characterize the diversity of ILC2s in the stomach and their response to parietal cell loss. We will examine whether ablation of ILC2s prevents the induction of metaplasia following acute oxyntic atrophy. Finally we will examine whether IL-13 is a direct activator of transdifferentiation in chief cells. Second, will identify the immune cell derived factors and intrinsic autocrine epithelial signals that can promote progression of metaplasia to a more intestinalized and proliferative phenotype. While transdifferentiation of chief cells into SPEM is an initial transition triggered as a response to parietal cell loss, further progression to more proliferative and intestinalized metaplasia requires other influences. We have developed metaplastic gastroid lines from Mist1-KRas mice 1 month or 4 months after induction of active Ras, which display the characteristics of either SPEM or intestinal metaplasia, respectively. We will utilize these cells to ev...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9916731
Project number
5R01DK101332-07
Recipient
VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
Principal Investigator
James Richard Goldenring
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$472,614
Award type
5
Project period
2014-05-01 → 2022-04-30