| Literature DB >> 19756155 |
Erika Mileti1, Gianluca Matteoli, Iliyan D Iliev, Maria Rescigno.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While the use of probiotics to treat or prevent inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has been proposed, to this point the clinical benefits have been limited. In this report we analyzed the immunological activity of three strains of Lactobacillus to predict their in vivo efficacy in protecting against experimental colitis. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19756155 PMCID: PMC2738944 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0007056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary of the effect of different probiotics on animal models of colitis.
| Probiotic | Colitis model | Protective effect | Presumed mechanism of action | Reference |
| Lacidofil | Rats: TNBS+Candida | Yes | Reduced colonic damage, reduced serum inflammatory cytokines |
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| Bacillus subtilis PB6 | Rats: TNBS | Yes | Reduced colonic damage, reduced serum inflammatory cytokines |
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| VSL#3 | Mice: DSS | Yes | Prevented the DSS-induced increase of permeability and apoptosis |
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| E. feacalis, or L. acidophilus, or C. butyricum or B. adolescentis | Mice: DSS | Yes, E. Faecalis better effect | Reduced DAI and MPO activity. |
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| Mixture of four Lactobacillus or four Bifidobacterium species | Mice: DSS | Yes | Reduced weight loss, colonic damage, inflammatory cytokine expression in colon. |
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| F. prausnitzii | Mice: TNBS | Yes | Antinflammatory effect: able to block NF-kappaB activation and IL-8 production on Caco-2 cells. |
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| Reduction of colonic inflammatory cytokines. | ||||
| LGG or mixture of S. thermophilus, L. acidophilus, and B. longum | Rats: TNBS | No | Reduction of pathogenic species. Only LGG reduced MPO activity but not statistically significant. |
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| VSL#3 | Mice: IL-10 KO | Yes | Reduced inflammation and upregulation of mucosal alkaline sphingomyelinase activity |
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| E. coli M-17 | Mice: DSS | Yes | Reduced IL-1beta, reduced severity of disease |
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| L. plantarum DSM 15313, L. fermentum 35D. | Mice: DSS | Yes | Improved the DAI, reduced bacterial translocation, and reduced inflammation |
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| L. salivarius 433118 | Mice: DSS IL-10 KO | No effect |
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| L. fermentum ACA-DC 179, L. plantarum ACA-DC 287 and S. macedonicus ACA-DC 198 | Mice: TNBS | No effect of L. plantarum and S. macedonicus. Protection by L. fermentum. | Reduced inflammation by unknown mechanism |
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| L. casei | Mice: TLR-4 KO and DSS | Yes | Reduced colitis and reduced expression of inflammatory cytokines. Down-regulation of neutrophil recruitment |
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| L. casei, L.acidophilus and B. lactis | Rat: TNBS | Yes | Intestinal anti-inflammatory effects, significant reduction in the colonic weight/length ratio |
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| L.s gasseri expressing MnSOD | Mice: IL-10 KO | Yes | L. gasseri producing MnSOD significantly reduced inflammation and infiltration of neutrophils and macrophages |
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| Several strains | Mice:TNBS | Yes | Correlation between high IL-10/IL-12 and protective effects against colitis |
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| L. reuteri and L. fermentum | Rats: TNBS | Yes: L. fermentum more effective. | Both strains reduced TNFalpha levels and inducible NO synthase |
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| LGG, S. thermophilus TH-4, B. lactis Bb12 and L. fermentum BR11 | Rats: DSS | Yes and no: differences among the strains | B. lactis Bb12 and L. fermentum BR11 decreased severity of colitis. |
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| TH-4 did not prevent DSS-colitis and LGG actually exacerbated the disease. | ||||
| L. salivarius Ls-33; L. plantarum Lp-115 and L. acidophilus NCFM | Mice: TNBS | Yes and no: differences among the strains | L. salivarius Ls-33 had a preventive effect on colitis in mice. Lactobacillus plantarum Lp-115 and L. acidophilus NCFM had no effect. L. paracasei exacerbated colitis |
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| E. coli Nissle 1917 | Mice:TLR-2, TLR-4 KO+DSS | Yes | E. coli Nissle ameliorated colitis only in WT colitic mice, but not in the two KO suggesting TLR-2 and TLR-4 dependent mechanisms. |
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| L. delbrueckii bulgaricus B3 or L. delbrueckii bulgaricus A13 | Rats: Acetic acid | Yes | Reduced colonic damage and myeloperoxidase activity in both probiotic-treated groups, but high-EPS group even better scores. |
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| VSL#3 | Mice: DSS | No | No effect on colitis or on epithelial barrier repair |
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| L. casei Shirota | Mice: DSS | Yes | Reduced disease severity |
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| L. fermentum | Rats: TNBS | Yes | Amelioration of the inflammatory response and reduced MPO activity |
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| L. casei DN-114 001 | Rats: TNBS | Yes | Reduced inflammation and reduced barrier disruption. |
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| L. casei Shirota | Mice: DSS and SAMP1/Yit | Yes | Reduced colitis and reduced IL-6 production by LPMC |
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| E. coli Nissle1917 | Mice: acute DSS; chronic IL-10 KO | Yes | Acute model: Nissle1917 ameliorated body weight loss, DAI |
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| Chronic model, suppressed inflammation and histologic damages | ||||
| VSL#3 | Mice: TNBS (recurrent colitis) | Yes | Increased production of IL-10 and number of regulatory CD4+ T cells bearing surface TGF-beta |
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| L. crispatus M247 | Mice: DSS | Yes | Reduced the severity of colitis (but only the aggregating form of bacteria) |
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| E. coli Nissle 1917 | Mice: Acute: DSS; chronic: T cell transfer in SCID mice | Yes | Ameliorated acute and chronic experimental colitis by reduced inflamamtion |
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| L. salivarius 433118 and B. infantis 35624 | Mice: IL-10 KO | Yes | Reduce colonic and caecal inflammatory scores. Reduced inflammatory cytokines. TGF-b levels maintained. |
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| VSL#3 or LGG | Rats: DNBS; iodoacetamide | Yes and no depending on colitis model. Decreased inflammation in iodoacetamide model. No effect on DNBS. | Reduced inflammation but decrease in PGE2, MPO, and NOS activity. |
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| L. plantarum 299v | Mice: IL-10 KO | Yes | Unknown |
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| Lactobacillus and C. butyricum | Rats: DSS | No effect |
| |
| L. salivarius UCC118 | Mice: IL-10 KO | Yes | Reduced mucosal inflammatory activity and cancer |
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| L. plantarum 299 | Rats: TNBS/E | No effect |
| |
| IL-10-secreting Lactococcus lactis | Mice: DSS; IL-10 KO | Yes | IL-10 mediated effect |
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Abbreviations used:
Disease activity index (DAI).
Myeloperoxidase activity (MPO).
Manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD).
Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS).
Exopolysaccharide (EPS).
Lamina propria mononuclear cells (LPMC).
dinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (DNBS).
trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid/ethanol (TNBS/E).
Figure 1DCs are phenotypically similarly activated by Lactobacilli.
DCs were incubated or not with the reported live bacterial strains for 1 h in medium without antibiotics, washed and incubated for 23 h in medium with antibiotics. Cells were stained for HLA-DR and CD80 expression and analyzed by FACS. A. % of cells highly positive for the marker is reported. B. Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) expression of markers is reported. C. Viability of the cells after 24 h incubation with bacteria. Cells were stained with propidium iodide (PI) and annexin V and analyzed by FACS. Cells double negative for both markers are considered viable cells. Error bars: standard deviations on values obtained on 4 different donors.
Figure 2DCs incubated with different bacterial strains produce a distinct cytokine profile.
A. DCs were incubated or not with the reported live bacterial strains for 1 h in medium without antibiotics, washed and incubated for 23 h in medium with antibiotics. Culture supernatants were collected and tested for cytokine contents by ELISA. Each symbol represents a different DC donor. Red lines represent mean values. *, p<0.05; **, p<0.01. S. typhim.: S. typhimurium; L. plant.: L. plantarum; L. parac.: L. paracasei. B. To analyze the kinetic of cytokine production, DCs were incubated or not with the reported live bacterial strains for 1 h in medium without antibiotics, washed and incubated for 3–5 h in medium with antibiotics. Culture supernatants were collected and tested for cytokine release by ELISA. Error bars: standard deviations on values obtained on 4 different donors.
Figure 3Lactobacilli-treated DCs have different ability to induce T cell proliferation and cytokine production.
A. T cell proliferation: DCs were incubated or not with the reported live bacterial strains for 1 h in medium without antibiotics, washed and incubated for 23 h in medium with antibiotics. Bacteria-treated DCs were washed and incubated with naïve CD4+CD45RA+ cells for 3 days, followed by a 16-hours pulse with 1 µCi [3H] thymidine (Amersham, Milan). 3H-thymidine incorporation is shown. Each symbol represents a different DC donor. Red lines represent mean values. *, p<0.05. S. typh: S. typhimurium; L. plan: L. plantarum; L. par: L. paracasei. B. Cytokine release: Bacteria-treated DCs were incubated with naïve CD4+CD45RA+ cells for 5 days (Ratio 1∶10 DC∶T cells). Cell culture supernatants were collected and cytokines measured by ELISA or CBA Flex set. Error bars: standard deviation on values obtained on 3 different donors. *, p<0.05; **, p<0.01.
Figure 4L. paracasei induces increased levels of TGF-β and TSLP.
Caco-2 cells were grown as monolayers in the upper chamber of a transwell filter and incubated with live bacteria (5×107 CFU/TW) upon the apical surface (top chamber). One hour after incubation, bacteria were washed out and medium was changed with one containing antibiotics. Culture supernatants were collected 3, 5, 23 and 47 hours later from the bottom chamber and tested for cytokine release. Error bars: standard deviations on values obtained in 2 different experiments. *, p<0.05; **, p<0.01.
Figure 5L. paracasei inhibits the release of inflammatory cytokines both directly and indirectly on DCs.
Each treatment is schematically reported below the graphs. Three situations were analyzed (a, b, c). a. DCs were incubated or not with the reported live bacterial strains either separately (SL, Salmonella; LP, L. paracasei) or together (LP+SL) for 1 h in medium without antibiotics, washed and incubated for 23 h in medium with antibiotics. b. Caco-2 cells were grown as monolayers in the upper chamber of a transwell filter. 24 h from achievement of a TER of 300 Ohm•cm2 supernatants (sn Caco) were collected from the bottom chamber and used to pre-treat DCs for 24 h before bacterial incubation as in a. c. Caco-2 cells were grown as monolayers in the upper chamber of a transwell filter and incubated with L. paracasei (5×107 CFU/TW) upon the apical surface (top chamber). One hour after incubation, bacteria were washed out and medium was changed with one containing antibiotics. Culture supernatants (sn caco LP) were collected 24 hours later from the bottom chamber, filtered and used to pre-treat DCs for 24 h before bacterial incubation as in a. 24 h after bacterial treatment of DCs cell culture supernatants were collected and cytokines analyzed by ELISA. Error bars: standard deviations on values obtained on 3 different donors. *, p<0.05; **, p<0.01
Figure 6L. paracasei culture supernatant is responsible for the anti-inflamamtory activity of the bacterium.
DCs were incubated or not with the reported live bacterial strains either separately (SL, Salmonella; LP, L. paracasei) or together (LP+SL) or in the presence of culture supernatants of L. paracasei corresponding to the exponential growth of the same amount of CFU of bacteria used to treat the DCs. The culture supernatant (sn LP) was used either undiluted or diluted 1/5, 1/10, 1/100 that correspond to nearly 7%, 1,4%, 0,7%, and 0,07% volume/volume of tissue culture medium, respectively. Cells were incubated with the different treatments for 1 h in medium without antibiotics, washed and incubated for 23 h in medium with antibiotics. Cytokine release was analyzed by ELISA. Error bars: standard deviations on values obtained on 3 different donors. *, p<0.05; **, p<0.01
Figure 7L. paracasei inhibits the ability of DCs to activate T cells.
Three situations were analyzed (a, b, c) as in fig. 6 DCs were incubated or not with the reported live bacterial strains either separately (SL, Salmonella; LP, L. paracasei) or together (LP+SL) for 1 h in medium without antibiotics, washed and incubated for 23 h in medium with antibiotics. a. Caco-2 cells were grown as monolayers in the upper chamber of a transwell filter. 24 h from achievement of a TER of 300 Ohm•cm2 supernatants (sn Caco) were collected from the bottom chamber and used to pre-treat DCs for 24 h before bacterial incubation as in a. b. Caco-2 cells were grown as monolayers in the upper chamber of a transwell filter and incubated with L. paracasei (5×107 CFU/TW) upon the apical surface (top chamber). One hour after incubation, bacteria were washed out and medium was changed with one containing antibiotics. Culture supernatants (sn caco LP) were collected 24 hours later from the bottom chamber, filtered and used to pre-treat DCs for 24 h before bacterial incubation as in a. Cells were then washed and incubated with naïve CD4+CD45RA+ cells for 5 days (Ratio 1∶10 DC∶T cells). Cell culture supernatants were collected and cytokines measured by ELISA or CBA Flex set. Error bars: standard deviations on values obtained on 3 different donors. *, p<0.05; **, p<0.01.
Figure 8L. paracasei protects against DSS colitis.
Mice (n = 6) were administered intra gastrically (i.g.) once a day for 7 days with 200 µl PBS containing 1010 CFUs of bacteria or plain PBS as a control. Mice were then fed with 2% DSS dissolved in the drinking water for 5 days without bacteria, followed by 7 days of plain water and assessed over time for colitis development. A. Body weight was measured at baseline and every day for the duration of the experiment. Weight change was calculated as percentage change in weight compared with baseline. L. plant.: L. plantarum; L. parac.: L. paracasei. Asterisks refer to statistical analysis of the groups LGG or L. plantarum versus DSS PBS positive control group. *, p<0.05; **, p<0.01; = , dead animals. B. Disease activity index (DAI) was measured as reported in Materials and Methods. DAI at 4, 5, 7 days is shown per each group. The scatterplot shows a line at the mean of each group with error bars. Dashed lines identify one standard deviation above and below the group means. *, p<0.05; **, p<0.01.