| Literature DB >> 32630805 |
Dominika Jakubczyk1, Katarzyna Leszczyńska1, Sabina Górska1.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which affects millions of people worldwide, includes two separate diseases: Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Although the background (chronic inflammatory state) and some of the symptoms of CD and UC are similar, both diseases differ from each other. It is becoming clear that a combination of many factors, in particular genetic background, host immune response and microbial reduced diversity status are associated with IBD. One potential strategy to prevent/treat IBD is gut modulation by probiotics. Over the last twenty years, many publications have focused on the role of probiotics in the course of IBD. The review discusses the utility of different strains of probiotics, especially Bifidobacterium spp., in all factors potentially involved in the etiology of IBD. The probiotic modulatory properties among different study models (cell lines, animal models of colitis, clinical study) are discussed and probiotic usefulness is assessed in relation to the treatment, prevention, and remission of diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Bifidobacterium; Crohn’s disease; anti-inflammatory; inflammatory bowel disease; probiotic; treatment; ulcerative colitis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32630805 PMCID: PMC7400428 DOI: 10.3390/nu12071973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
The Montreal classification for Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) [9,10,11].
| CD Classification | UC Classification | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age at diagnosis | A1:< 17 years | Severity | S0: remission, no symptoms |
| A2: 17–40 years | S1: mild symptoms | ||
| A3: > 40 years | S2: moderate symptoms | ||
| S3: severe symptoms | |||
| Location, endoscopic or macroscopic estimation | L1: terminal ileal | Extensity | E1: ulcerative proctitis |
| L2: colon | E2: left-sided UC; distal colitis | ||
| L3: ileocolon | E3: extensive UC, pancolitis | ||
| L4: upper GI modifier: proximal disease with distal disease, such as L1 + L4, L2 + L4, L3 + L4) | |||
| Behavior over time | B1: non-stricturing, non-penetrating | ||
| B2: stricturing | |||
| B3: penetrating | |||
| P: perianal disease modifiers, such as B1p, B2p, B3p | |||
Figure 1The key players in inflammatory bowel disease.
Figure 2The role of the immune response in IBD. In CD, Th1 skewing is observed, but in UD, Th2 skewing is common. The population of Th17 cells is decreased regarding the Th1 or Th2 population. The decreased number of Treg cells and imbalance in Th17 and Treg subpopulation are common in both diseases. The subpopulation disturbance triggers the loss of tolerance for microbiota and the privilege of the proinflammatory processes. In turn, microbiota modulates the Treg population and has an anti-inflammatory effect.
The effectiveness of probiotics in the treatment of IBD.
| Strain | IBD | Research Model and Study Scheme | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD-like | Rat model (TNBS) | Reduction in the symptoms, weaker damage to the mucosal architecture, protective function for mucus goblet cells and the epithelial cell layer; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| CD-like | Murine model (TNBS) | Reduction in the edema, reduction in the macroscopic damage and histological scores, reduction in weight-loss, anti-inflammatory effect; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| CD-like | Rat model (TNBS) | Reduction in the edema, reduction in the macroscopic damage and histological scores, reduction in weight-loss, anti-inflammatory effect; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| CD-like | Rat model (TBSN) | No beneficial effects on the rat’s gut permeability, weight changes, colon microscopic scores, and the level of blood albumins; | [ | |
| Summary: Lack of positive effect | ||||
| UC-like | Murine model (DSS) | Protection against a reduction in colon length, better picture of the colon histology, reduction in apoptosis in the epithelial layer, decrease in the level of TNF-α; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC-like | Murine model (DSS) | Reduction in the clinical symptoms of the disease, protection of the colonic structure, reduction in edema; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC-like | Murine model (T-bet−/−Rag2−/−) | Reduction in severity of colitis and inflammation in an early stage, decrease in the level of | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
|
| UC-like | Murine model (DSS) | Modulation of the NF-kB pathway, reduction in the inflammatory state; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| VSL#3 | UC-like | Murine model (DSS) | Discrepancy in results (two different batches of VSL#3, contrary data); | [ |
| CD-like | Murine model (TBNS) | [ | ||
| Summary: positive effect only one batch of the same product | ||||
| CD-like | Murine model (TNBS) | Lower body weight-loss, better macroscopic indicators of inflammation (Wallace scores), histopathological analysis (Ameho score), and level of lipocalin-2, promotion in the bone marrow-derived dendritic cell maturation and IL-17A secretion | [ | |
| CD-like | Murine model (TNBS) | Lower body weight-loss, better macroscopic indicators of inflammation (Wallace scores), histopathological analysis (Ameho score), and level of lipocalin-2; greater involvement in the development of tolerogenic DC, induce Tregs population and expression of Reg3b in a NOD2-independent manner; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| CD | Human model | Help in maintaining remission and bowel sealing; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC | Human model | Promising usefulness in sustaining the remission phase, improvement in clinical activity index score and histological scores; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC | Human model | Promising behavior in sustaining the remission phase, prevention from inflammatory state; | [ | |
| Summary: the beneficial effect was demonstrated | ||||
| UC | Human model | Decrease in the IL-6 and TNF-alpha levels and lowering regulation of NF-kB; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC | Human model | Reduction in the levels CRP and TNF-α in both gastrointestinal and non-gastrointestinal inflammatory disorders, but did not particularly affect UC disease; | [ | |
| Summary: Lack of effect for UC group, positive effect for gastrointestinal, and non-gastrointestinal inflammatory disorders group | ||||
| UC | Human model | Better endoscopic scores, decrease of MPO level, modulation of luminal environmental factors such as intestinal microflora and pH | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC | Human model | No beneficial effect | [ | |
| Summary: no beneficial effect was observed, the study was discontinued | ||||
| UC | Human model | Maintaining remission in colitis | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC | Human model | Decrease in the disease activity index and downscale the rectal bleeding, clinical remission; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC | Human model | Reduction in recovery time, weaker activity of the disease, better endoscopic picture; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| VSL#3 | UC | Murine model | Decrease in the level of TNF-α and IL-6, reduction of number of pathogenic microbiota, increase in the population of | [ |
| Summary: preventive effect for UC associated carcinogenesis | ||||
| VSL#3 | UC | Human model | Improvement in rectal bleeding and stool frequency, mucosal appearance and overall physician’s evaluation; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| VSL#3 | UC | Human model | Reduction in UCDAI scores and frequency of rectal bleeding; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| VSL#3 | UC | Human model, children population | Remission in colitis, improvement in microbiota composition, decrease in level of IFN-γ, TNF-α, CRP, ESR; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
|
| CD | Murine model (TNBS) | Anti-inflammatory effect, blocking of NF-kB pathway and IL-8 production, anti-inflammatory effect; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
|
| Cancer model | Murine model | Inhibition of NF-kB and NF-kB-regulated genes in epithelial cells and prevention meaning for the acute colitis and cancer model, reduction in number and size of the tumors; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
|
| Cancer model | Murine cancer model | Reduction in cancer cells proliferation, increase in apoptosis level, protection of normal colon cell growth from toxic treatment; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| VSL#3 | Cancer model | Murine cancer model (IL10−/−)
| Shorter recovery time, lower disease severity in an active phase of cancer; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| VSL#3 | Cancer model | Murine cancer model/IL-10−/−
| No protection against inflammatory processes and tumor development, increase in the tumor penetrance, worsening histologic dysplasia scores, extension of Clostridium population; | [ |
| Summary: lack of beneficial effect, worsening of the neoplastic processes | ||||
| VSL#3 | Cancer model | Rat cancer model (TNBS) | Delay in the carcinoma growing processes, improvement in the histological picture of the colon, increase in the level of angiostatin vitamin D receptor (VDR); | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| n.a | Proteomic and transcriptomic study | Potential connection with IL-10 increase and anti-inflammatory value | [ | |
| Summary: anti-inflammatory effect as a results of combination cytoplasmatic and surface protein | ||||
| n.a | Cell line RAW 264.7 | Suppression in the inflammatory paths, inhibition of TLR, MAPK and NF-κB signaling pathways | [ | |
| Summary: anti-inflammatory properties were observed | ||||
| bacteria’s cells-free growth medium, | n.a | Cell line HT-29 | Anti-inflammatory properties, modulation of the level of IL-10, IL-1β, TNF-α, PGE-2, IL-8; | [ |
| Summary: anti-inflammatory properties were observed | ||||
| CD-like | Murine model (IL-10-deficient, DSS) | Increase in the number of Treg, decrease in the total number of T cells in the colon and the peripheral blood, positive influence on the tight junctions; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| UC | Case report | Symptoms of bacteremia; | [ | |
| Summary: probiotic strain as a cause of bacteremia | ||||
| VSL#3 | n.a | Rat model | Influence on the mucus structure, stimulation of expression of the Muc2 gene, increase in secretion of the non-mucin glycoprotein, improvement in the permeability of the intestinal barrier; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect on secretion and mucus within epithelial barrier | ||||
| VSL#3 | UC-like | Murine model ( | Induction of mucus secretion in the crypts’ goblet cells in the colon, reduction in the wall thickness and MPO level | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect on mucus secretion and oblet cells, lack of usage in colitis severity protection | ||||
| VSL#3 | n.a | Cell line Caco-2 | Discrepancy in results (two different manufacturers of VSL#3, contrary data) | [ |
| Summary: different usefulness of the same product but produced by two different manufacturers | ||||
| CD-like | Murine model (DSS) | Protective behavior of probiotic only on the BALB/c mice, increase in the barrier function by the upregulation of ZO-1, increase in the amount of Treg, decrease in the level of proinflammatory factors, TNF-α, INF-γ, IL-10, influence on microbiota composition; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| n.a | Cell line CaCo-2 | Increase in the level of the tight junction, increase in mucin secretion; | [ | |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||
| Lactobacillus plantarum, | n.a | Murine model (DSS) | Reduction in the permeability, increase in expression of JAM-1, occludin, ZO-1; | [ |
| Summary: a beneficial effect was observed | ||||