Lactobacillus GG and Tributyrin Supplementation Reduce Antibiotic‐Induced Intestinal Injury

G Cresci, LE Nagy, V Ganapathy - Journal of Parenteral and …, 2013 - Wiley Online Library
Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 2013Wiley Online Library
Background: Antibiotic therapy negatively alters the gut microbiota. Lactobacillus GG (LGG)
decreases antibiotic‐associated diarrhea (AAD) symptoms, but the mechanisms are
unknown. Butyrate has beneficial effects on gut health. Altered intestinal gene expression
occurs in the absence of gut microbiota. We hypothesized that antibiotic‐induced changes in
gut microbiota reduce butyrate production, varying genes involved with gut barrier integrity
and water and electrolyte absorption, lending to AAD, and that simultaneous …
Background: Antibiotic therapy negatively alters the gut microbiota. Lactobacillus GG (LGG) decreases antibiotic‐associated diarrhea (AAD) symptoms, but the mechanisms are unknown. Butyrate has beneficial effects on gut health. Altered intestinal gene expression occurs in the absence of gut microbiota. We hypothesized that antibiotic‐induced changes in gut microbiota reduce butyrate production, varying genes involved with gut barrier integrity and water and electrolyte absorption, lending to AAD, and that simultaneous supplementation with LGG and/or tributyrin would prevent these changes. Methods: C57BL/6 mice aged 6–8 weeks received a chow diet while divided into 8 treatment groups (± saline, ± LGG, ± tributyrin, or both). Mice received treatments orally for 7 days with ± broad‐spectrum antibiotics. Water intake was recorded daily and body weight was measured. Intestine tissue samples were obtained and analyzed for expression of genes and proteins involved with water and electrolyte absorption, butyrate transport, and gut integrity via polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry. Results: Antibiotics decreased messenger RNA (mRNA) expression (butyrate transporter and receptor, Na+/H+ exchanger, Cl/HCO3, and a water channel) and protein expression (butyrate transporter, Na+/H+ exchanger, and tight junction proteins) in the intestinal tract. LGG and/or tributyrin supplementation maintained intestinal mRNA expression to that of the control animals, and tributyrin maintained intestinal protein intensity expression to that of control animals. Conclusion: Broad‐spectrum antibiotics decrease expression of anion exchangers, butyrate transporter and receptor, and tight junction proteins in mouse intestine. Simultaneous oral supplementation with LGG and/or tributyrin minimizes these losses. Optimizing intestinal health with LGG and/or tributyrin may offer a preventative therapy for AAD.
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