| Literature DB >> 31467355 |
Sara Botschuijver1, Sophie A van Diest1, Isabelle A M van Thiel1, Rafael S Saia1,2, Anne S Strik1,3, Zhumei Yu1,4,5, Daniele Maria-Ferreira1,6, Olaf Welting1, Daniel Keszthelyi7, Gary Jennings8, Sigrid E M Heinsbroek1,3, Ronald P Oude Elferink1,3, Frank H J Schuren9, Wouter J de Jonge1,3, René M van den Wijngaard10,11.
Abstract
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a heterogenic, functional gastrointestinal disorder of the gut-brain axis characterized by altered bowel habit and abdominal pain. Preclinical and clinical results suggested that, in part of these patients, pain may result from fungal induced release of mast cell derived histamine, subsequent activation of sensory afferent expressed histamine-1 receptors and related sensitization of the nociceptive transient reporter potential channel V1 (TRPV1)-ion channel. TRPV1 gating properties are regulated in lipid rafts. Miltefosine, an approved drug for the treatment of visceral Leishmaniasis, has fungicidal effects and is a known lipid raft modulator. We anticipated that miltefosine may act on different mechanistic levels of fungal-induced abdominal pain and may be repurposed to IBS. In the IBS-like rat model of maternal separation we assessed the visceromotor response to colonic distension as indirect readout for abdominal pain. Miltefosine reversed post-stress hypersensitivity to distension (i.e. visceral hypersensitivity) and this was associated with differences in the fungal microbiome (i.e. mycobiome). In vitro investigations confirmed fungicidal effects of miltefosine. In addition, miltefosine reduced the effect of TRPV1 activation in TRPV1-transfected cells and prevented TRPV1-dependent visceral hypersensitivity induced by intracolonic-capsaicin in rat. Miltefosine may be an attractive drug to treat abdominal pain in IBS.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31467355 PMCID: PMC6715706 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-49096-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Miltefosine treatment reversed post water avoidance (WA) visceral hypersensitivity in maternally separated rats. (A) Schematic representation of the experimental set-up; the visceromotor response (VMR) to distension was measured before and 24 hours after WA, and after 7 day miltefosine or vehicle treatment. Data shown in histograms (B,C) reflect results of nonhandled and maternal separated rats respectively. Data are given as area under the curve of the relative response to colorectal distension. All data are mean +/− SD, n = 7–10, *P < 0.05 and **P < 0.01 (Repeated Measures one-way ANOVA, Sidak’s post hoc test).
Figure 2Miltefosine induced in vitro C. albicans and B. subtilis growth inhibition and in vivo differences in post-treatment myco- and microbiome composition. Right side photographs show agar disk diffusion assays with C. albicans (A) and B. subtilis (B). Arrows indicate direction of miltefosine concentration series (50, 250, 1000 and 10000 µM). Controls: phosphate buffered solution (PBS), nystatin (nyst) and penicillin/streptomycin (p/s). Histograms (A,B) show the average diameter of resulting halos (mean +/− SD, n = 3, ****P < 0.0001, one-way ANOVA and Dunnett’s post hoc test). Visualization of the fecal myco- and microbiome of maternally separated rats subjected to vehicle or miltefosine is shown in (C,D) respectively. The Bray-Curtis dissimilarity index was used to generate the left side dendrograms and right side non-metric multidimensional scaling plots.
Figure 3The % of intensely stained mast cells was higher in miltefosine treated tissues. Arrows in left side photographs (A) indicate representative examples of different mast cell staining intensities obtained with Toluidine Blue. (B) Shows % mucosal mast cells per staining intensity when comparing tissue sections of miltefosine and vehicle treated maternal separated rats. Data are in median & range, *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01 (Mann-Whitney U test).
Figure 4Miltefosine interfered with in vitro and in vivo capsaicin-induced TRPV1 activation. (A) Intracellular free calcium levels in response to different dosages of capsaicin in wildtype- and TRPV-1 transfected SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells. (B) Capsaicin-induced activation of SH-SY5YhTRPV1 cells in the presence of a specific TRPV1 antagonist (SB-705498). (C) Capsaicin-induced activation of SH-SY5YhTRPV1 cells, pre-incubated with different dosages of miltefosine (mean +/− SD, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001, one-way ANOVA, Dunnett’s post hoc test). (D) Schematic representation of experiments performed in the intracolonic capsaicin model and results of colorectal distensions in this model. Results are given as area under the curve of the relative response to distension (mean +/− SD, n = 9–10, ***P < 0.001, Repeated Measures one-way ANOVA, Sidak’s post hoc test).
Figure 5Miltefosine-targets identified in the maternal separation model. Miltefosine affected the fecal myco- and microbiome (1), mast cell degranulation (2) and the TRPV1 ion channel (3). Effects on the histamine 1 receptor (H1R) may have been relevant as well but were not addressed in the current investigations.