Peer review process
Not revised: This Reviewed Preprint includes the authors’ original preprint (without revision), an eLife assessment, public reviews, and a provisional response from the authors.
Read more about eLife’s peer review process.Editors
- Reviewing EditorNandan NerurkarColumbia University, Boston, United States of America
- Senior EditorKathryn CheahUniversity of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Reviewer #1 (Public review):
Kawamura et al. investigated the role of circumferential smooth muscle contractions in chick gut tube elongation, addressing the hypothesis that "peristaltic activity generated by the gut promotes its own elongation during embryogenesis". Although not acknowledged in the current manuscript, this interesting premise was, in fact, previously demonstrated.
Indeed, the experiments in the present manuscript closely parallel a previous study (Khalipina et al, 2019: "Smooth muscle contractility causes the gut to grow anisotropically") that also cultured chick gut tissue and performed time-lapse analyses to quantify peristalsis. Both studies showed that inhibiting peristalsis with Ca-channel blockers induces a switch from elongational to radial growth in the gut.
However, one of the main strengths of the current study is the innovative use of optogenetic manipulation to rescue gut lengthening in drug-inhibited gut tissue by re-stimulating peristaltic contractions. In addition, the authors use aphidicolin to show that peristalsis-mediated gut elongation is independent of cell division. They also track individual smooth muscle cells and show that they divide circumferentially, but become redistributed along the length of the gut tube with peristalsis.
While these data are solidly quantitative, they do not provide mechanistic insight into how peristaltic contractions cause smooth muscle cells to be redistributed.
The evidence presented in this manuscript supports the main conclusion that peristalsis plays a critical role in embryonic gut elongation, but this conclusion itself is not novel. In addition to corroborating previous work, this manuscript provides some useful additions to our existing knowledge of the role of mechanical forces in embryonic gut morphogenesis and illustrates the utility of a previously published optogenetic manipulation technique.
Reviewer #2 (Public review):
Summary:
This study uses the chicken caecum ex vivo culture to show that embryonic peristaltic activity is a key mechanical factor for gut elongation. It is shown that pharmacological inhibition arrests intestinal growth, while optogenetic restoration rescues longitudinal elongation. The authors propose a two-step mechanism in which circular smooth muscle cells proliferate circumferentially, but peristalsis pushes them toward longitudinal rearrangement, which explains the anisotropic growth of the gut.
Strengths:
The experiments combine loss-of-function (peristalsis inhibition) with gain-of-function (optogenetic rescue) experiments and quantifiable readouts in an embryonic gut culture model. The work is clearly presented with nice microscopy videos and offers a potentially valuable conceptual framework linking tissue-scale mechanics to smooth muscle cell behaviors during development.
Weaknesses:
Some results appear conceptually inconsistent with the claim of peristalsis-essential rearrangement (e.g., longitudinal separation of daughter cells even without peristalsis), and the mechanistic link would benefit from clearer quantification and reconciliation. The study largely overlooks contributions from other gut layers and the ECM (and aphidicolin affects all proliferating cells), limiting interpretation of how smooth muscle rearrangement translates into whole-wall elongation.
Reviewer #3 (Public review):
Summary:
The authors noted a steep increase in the rate of growth with the onset of more frequent peristaltic-like movements and hypothesized that peristaltic activity rearranges the orientation of cell growth from circumferential to longitudinal. This study sought to alter peristalsis and then (1) carefully examine the growth of the chick cecum relative to the frequency of peristaltic-like movements and (2) examine the orientation of cells relative to the circumferential and longitudinal axes to determine whether peristalsis is required for cecum lengthening. To alter peristaltic-like movements, contraction was inhibited through treatment with nifedipine (a calcium channel blocker that acts to relax smooth muscle) or Ani9 (inhibits Ca-activated chloride channels), and contractions were induced through activation of a blue light-activatable channel rhodopsin 2 (introduced through electroporation).
Strengths:
(1) Use of multiple methods to alter peristalsis in initial studies.
(2) Live imaging.
(3) Careful measurements.
(4) Nicely presented figures.
Weaknesses:
(1) Only Nifedipine inhibition was examined for cell positional changes.
(2) Ki67 was not carefully analysed, and apoptosis was not shown at all.
(3) The results shown are suggestive of a role for peristalsis in the lengthening of the cecum. Demonstration that increased peristalsis could further increase lengthening would be helpful.
(4) The novelty of this work is incremental for the field in that the reagents used and the model of smooth muscle driving gut lengthening in mouse and chick small intestines have both previously been published. This manuscript does suggest that the role of smooth muscle in longitudinal growth may extend to other tubular organs (chick cecum).