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Processed meat products with added plant antioxidants affect the microbiota and immune response in C57BL/6JRj mice with cyclically induced chronic inflammation

Authors :
Yunjeong So
Kimmo Rumpunen
Elin Oscarsson
Kajsa Granheimer
Eva Tornberg
Pamela Canaviri Paz
Stina C.M. Burri
Åsa Håkansson
Milladur Rahman
Vandana Tannira
Anne-Marie Rohrstock
Marine Rémy
Elisabeth Uhlig
Source :
Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy, Vol 135, Iss, Pp 111133-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Epidemiological studies have found that there is a correlation between red and processed meat consumption and an increased risk of colorectal cancer. There are numerous existing hypotheses on what underlying mechanisms are causative to this correlation, but the results remain unclear. A common hypothesis is that lipid oxidation, which occurs in endogenous lipids and phospholipids in consumed food, are catalyzed by the heme iron in meat. In this study, five pre-selected plant antioxidant preparations (sea buckthorn leaves and sprouts, summer savory leaves, olive polyphenols, onion skin and lyophilized black currant leaves) were added to a meatball type prone to oxidize (pork meat, 20 % fat, 2% salt, deep-fried and after 2 weeks of storage). Pro-inflammatory markers, neutrophil infiltration and microbiota composition were studied after four months in a chronic inflammation model in C57BL6/J female mice. We found that the bacterial diversity index was affected, as well as initial immunological reactions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07533322
Volume :
135
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7176d0b1e515ae520e5396b29c4a4223