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Probiotics prevent intestinal barrier dysfunction in acute pancreatitis in rats via induction of ileal mucosal glutathione biosynthesis

Authors :
Louis M. A. Akkermans
Hein G. Gooszen
Harro M. Timmerman
Per Sandström
Lena M. Trulsson
Ger T. Rijkers
L. Paul van Minnen
Karl-Eric Magnusson
Femke Lutgendorff
Johan D. Söderholm
Rian M. Nijmeijer
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS One, 4, PLoS ONE, Vol 4, Iss 2, p e4512 (2009), PLoS One, 4, 2
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

BACKGROUND: During acute pancreatitis (AP), oxidative stress contributes to intestinal barrier failure. We studied actions of multispecies probiotics on barrier dysfunction and oxidative stress in experimental AP. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Fifty-three male Spraque-Dawley rats were randomly allocated into five groups: 1) controls, non-operated, 2) sham-operated, 3) AP, 4) AP and probiotics and 5) AP and placebo. AP was induced by intraductal glycodeoxycholate infusion and intravenous cerulein (6 h). Daily probiotics or placebo were administered intragastrically, starting five days prior to AP. After cerulein infusion, ileal mucosa was collected for measurements of E. coli K12 and (51)Cr-EDTA passage in Ussing chambers. Tight junction proteins were investigated by confocal immunofluorescence imaging. Ileal mucosal apoptosis, lipid peroxidation, and glutathione levels were determined and glutamate-cysteine-ligase activity and expression were quantified. AP-induced barrier dysfunction was characterized by epithelial cell apoptosis and alterations of tight junction proteins (i.e. disruption of occludin and claudin-1 and up-regulation of claudin-2) and correlated with lipid peroxidation (r>0.8). Probiotic pre-treatment diminished the AP-induced increase in E. coli passage (probiotics 57.4+/-33.5 vs. placebo 223.7+/-93.7 a.u.; P

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
4
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PloS one
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....54fa85d5749d86190d2c6bc674ba0981