Pretreatment with Lactobacillus reuteri F-9-35 attenuates ethanol-induced gastric injury in rats.
Autor: | Ping-Ping Hou, Xin-Yu Wang, Chang-Hui Zhao, Bi-Jun Cheng, Tie-Hua Zhang, Hai-Qing Ye, Mao-Cheng Sun, Yan-Ling Wang, Hong-Wei Hao |
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Předmět: |
PEPTIC ulcer prevention
GASTRIC diseases STOMACH injuries ANIMAL experimentation ETHANOL GENE expression GLUTATHIONE INFLAMMATORY mediators INTERLEUKINS LACTOBACILLUS LIPID peroxidation (Biology) MILK MUCUS NITRIC oxide NONSTEROIDAL anti-inflammatory agents OXIDOREDUCTASES RATS STATISTICAL sampling STOMACH TUMOR necrosis factors WATER DNA-binding proteins CYCLOOXYGENASE 2 OXIDATIVE stress PROBIOTICS COLONY-forming units assay PHARMACODYNAMICS PREVENTION |
Zdroj: | Food & Nutrition Research; 2018, Vol. 62, p1-8, 8p |
Abstrakt: | Background: Previous studies suggested that probiotics intervention may be one of the methods for preventing and/or treating gastric ulcer. Objective: The aim of the study was to compare the preventive effects of a spaceflight mutant Lactobacillus reuteri F-9-35 and its wild type on ethanol-induced gastric injury in rats. Design: Forty rats were randomly allocated into five groups: a normal group (NOR), ethanol group (EtOH), skim milk group (MILK), L. reuteri F-9-35 group (F935) and wild-type group (WT). The NOR and EtOH groups received 1 ml of distilled water by daily gavage for 14 days. The MILK group received 1 ml of skim milk alone, while the F935 and WT groups were administered 1 ml of skim milk containing the mutant and wild type (1 x 1010 colony-forming unit/ml) by daily gavage for 14 days, respectively. Acute gastric injury was induced by absolute alcohol 1 h after the final administration of different treatments, except for the NOR group. Results: Pretreatment with L. reuteri F-9-35, but not milk alone or milk with the L. reuteri wild type, showed significant reduction of ethanol-induced gastric injury, as evidenced by lowering of ulcer index, ulcer area (%), and histological lesion. F-9-35 decreased the levels of lipid peroxidation and myeloperoxidase and increased mucus, glutathione, and nitric oxide levels in gastric tissue. Moreover, F-9-35 inhibited the expression of proinflammatory genes including gastric tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-1β, and cyclooxygenase-2 and decreased the activity of nuclear factor kappa B (NF-B). Conclusion: These findings indicated that L. reuteri F-9-35 pretreatment can attenuate ethanol-induced gastric injury in rats by inhibiting oxidative stress and inflammatory response. Together, L. reuteri F-9-35 has potential preventive efficacy on gastric ulcer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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