Acetylcholinesterase plays a non-neuronal, non-esterase role in organogenesis.

Development

Department of Biology, Environmental and Molecular Toxicology Program, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27606, USA

Published: August 2017

Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is crucial for degrading acetylcholine at cholinergic synapses. studies suggest that, in addition to its role in nervous system signaling, AChE can also modulate non-neuronal cell properties, although it remains controversial whether AChE functions in this capacity Here, we show that AChE plays an essential non-classical role in vertebrate gut morphogenesis. Exposure of embryos to AChE-inhibiting chemicals results in severe defects in intestinal development. Tissue-targeted loss-of-function assays (via microinjection of antisense morpholino or CRISPR-Cas9) confirm that AChE is specifically required in the gut endoderm tissue, a non-neuronal cell population, where it mediates adhesion to fibronectin and regulates cell rearrangement events that drive gut lengthening and digestive epithelial morphogenesis. Notably, the classical esterase activity of AChE is dispensable for this activity. As AChE is deeply conserved, widely expressed outside of the nervous system, and the target of many environmental chemicals, these results have wide-reaching implications for development and toxicology.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5560043PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dev.149831DOI Listing

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