| Literature DB >> 30513801 |
Marina Liso1, Stefania De Santis2, Aurelia Scarano3, Giulio Verna4, Manuela Dicarlo5, Vanessa Galleggiante6, Pietro Campiglia7, Mauro Mastronardi8, Antonio Lippolis9, Mirco Vacca10, Anastasia Sobolewski11, Grazia Serino12, Eugenio Butelli13, Maria De Angelis14, Cathie Martin15, Angelo Santino16, Marcello Chieppa17.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are debilitating chronic inflammatory disorders that develop as a result of a defective immune response toward intestinal bacteria. Intestinal dysbiosis is associated with the onset of IBD and has been reported to persist even in patients in deep remission. We investigated the possibility of a dietary-induced switch to the gut microbiota composition using Winnie mice as a model of spontaneous ulcerative colitis and chow enriched with 1% Bronze tomato. We used the near isogenic tomato line strategy to investigate the effects of a diet enriched in polyphenols administered to mild but established chronic intestinal inflammation. The Bronze-enriched chow administered for two weeks was not able to produce any macroscopic effect on the IBD symptoms, although, at molecular level there was a significant induction of anti-inflammatory genes and intracellular staining of T cells revealed a mild decrease in IL17A and IFNγ production. Analysis of the microbial composition revealed that two weeks of Bronze enriched diet was sufficient to perturb the microbial composition of Winnie and control mice, suggesting that polyphenol-enriched diets may create unfavorable conditions for distinct bacterial species. In conclusion, dietary regimes enriched in polyphenols may efficiently support IBD remission affecting the intestinal dysbiosis.Entities:
Keywords: bronze tomatoes; inflammatory bowel disease (IBD); microbiota; murine models; polyphenols
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30513801 PMCID: PMC6315348 DOI: 10.3390/nu10121862
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 6.706
Figure 1Experimental design and macroscopic characterization of the experimental groups. (A) Sex-matched mice were divided into four groups based on their genotype (Wild Type or Winnie) and their diet (enriched with Control or Bronze lyophilized tomato fruit). Mouse weight was recorded at the beginning of diet administration (Day 0) and at the end of the trial (2 Weeks). Fecal samples were collected for microbial meta-analyses at both time points (Day 0 and Week 2). Tissues were explanted and analyzed at the end of the treatments as indicated. Analysis of mice from different groups included: mouse weight (B), colon weight/mouse weight (C) and colon length/mouse weight (D). Black bars show the values at Day 0, striped bars show the Control- and white bars the Bronze-enriched diet. Statistical evaluation was performed using unpaired two-tailed Student’s t-tests.
Figure 2Mesenteric lymph node T cell cytokine staining. (A) Representative Treg staining of CD4+ cells. Histograms represent the percentages of Foxp3+CD25+ cells in the MLNs of mice fed with Control-enriched diet (striped bars) and Bronze-enriched diet (white bars). (B) Representative density plot analysis of intracellular staining of MLNs from Winnie mice. (C,D) Intracellular staining of IFNγ and IL-17A in the CD4+ (C) and CD4− (D) MLN cells of WT and Winnie mice after 2 weeks of Control or Bronze-enriched diets. Statistical evaluation was performed using unpaired two-tailed Student’s t-tests. * P < 0.05.
Figure 3Two weeks of Bronze-enriched diet induced Slpi and Hmox1 expression in the medial colon of WT and Winnie mice. Histograms represent the average expression of Il-10, Tnf-α, Ifnγ, Slpi and Hmox1 (A–E respectively) measured by real time PCR in the medial colon of WT and Winnie mice after two weeks of Control- (striped bars) and Bronze-enriched diet (white bars). Black bars represent the gene expression at Day 0. All bars represent mean expression ± SEM for each treatment. Control and Bronze dependent expression were compared to WT Day 0 for the statistical evaluation. Student’s t-test was used to compare every measurement to the corresponding WT Day 0 and evaluate the significance of the data. ** P < 0.01,* P < 0.05 (Student’s t-test). Grouped analyses were performed with the two-way ANOVA test, using Bonferroni as a post test.
Figure 4Total bacteria found in feces of WT and Winnie mice. Relative abundance (%) of total (16S rRNA) bacteria, found at the phylum level in the fecal samples of WT and Winnie mice at Day 0 (0W) and after two weeks (2W) on Bronze (Bronze) or Control tomato (Control) diets.
Figure 5The Bronze-enriched diet affected the fecal bacterial genera of both WT and Winnie mice. Relative abundance (%) of total (16S rRNA) bacteria, found at the genus level in the fecal samples of WT and Winnie mice at T0 (Day 0, black bars) and after two weeks of Bronze (white bars) or Control tomato (striped bars) diet.