| Literature DB >> 34901266 |
Marzieh Nemati1, Gholamhossein Ranjbar Omrani1, Bahareh Ebrahimi2, Nima Montazeri-Najafabady1,3.
Abstract
Probiotics are living microorganisms increasingly used to treat or modulate different diseases or disorders because of their benefits and also low adverse reaction, and their positive and protective effects on various cells and tissues have been reported. The mechanisms by which probiotics exert their beneficial effects in different cells and tissues were investigated, and autophagy is one of the main mechanisms to induce their positive effects. Autophagy is a conserved process that occurs in all eukaryotic cells and plays an essential role in homeostasis and cell survival by degrading damaged and dysfunctional intracellular organelles. On the other hand, the role of autophagy is diverse in different tissues and situations, and cell death derived from autophagy has been observed in some cells. This search was done in PubMed, WOS, and Scopus using the keywords probiotic, microbiota, and autophagy. The search strategy was focused on the in vitro and animal model studies, and the included filters were English language publications and full-text articles (by June 2020). Studies that investigated other underlying mechanisms except autophagy were excluded. Among more than 105 papers, 24 studies were considered eligible for more evaluation. The obtained results indicated that most studies were performed on intestinal cell lines or tissue compared with other types of cell lines and tissue. This review article discusses our current understanding of the probiotic effects through autophagy in different cell lines and tissues that would be a useful guide to daily and clinical usage of these living microorganisms, but despite promising results of this systematic review, further studies need to assess this issue. This systematic review has demonstrated that autophagy is an effective mechanism in inducing beneficial effects of probiotics in different tissues.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34901266 PMCID: PMC8664546 DOI: 10.1155/2021/2931580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Literature search and study selection flowchart.
The effects of probiotics through induction of autophagy in vitro.
| Probiotics | Cell lines | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bifidobacterium breve | Human intestinal epithelial cells | Probiotics induce autophagy in gut epithelial cells that have beneficial clinical effects attributed to a healthy enteric | [ |
| Bifidobacteria | Rat intestinal epithelial cell line | Probiotics stimulated an autophagy response in IEC, thereby maintaining balanced crosstalk with intestinal epithelia | [ |
| Bifidobacterium breve | Mice intestinal epithelial cells | Probiotics increase expression of the autophagy proteins and promote their survival during stress | [ |
| Bifidobacteria | Rat intestinal epithelial cell line | Probiotic treatment through inhibiting LPS-induced autophagy provides enteroprotection and maintains gut homeostasis | [ |
| B. dentium | Mice intestinal cells | Probiotics via upregulation of gene expression and autophagy signaling pathways, net increased production | [ |
| Bacillus SC06 or SC08 | Rat intestinal epithelial cell line | Attenuates oxidative stress-induced intestinal injury via p38-mediated autophagy | [ |
| Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) | Mice intestinal epithelial cells | LAB exert anti-infection and anti-inflammation effects through inducing autophagy | [ |
| LAB | Human colon cancer cells | Probiotic treatment exert antitumourigenic via the activation of autophagic cell death in cancer cells | [ |
| Bacillus amyloliquefaciens SC06 | Murine macrophage cell line RAW264.7 | Probiotics-mediated autophagy, prevent bacterial infection in intestine | [ |
| Lactobacillus brevis BGZLS10-17 | MLNC | The immunoregulatory effects of | [ |
| Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) | HMDMs | LAB enhance the autophagic ability of mononuclear phagocytes in response to Mtb antigen | [ |
| Lactobacilli and Bifidobacteria | BMCD from autophagy protein-deficient mice | Probiotics via autophagy induce immune-regulatory responses | [ |
BMCD: bone marrow cell derived; HMDMs: human monocyte-derived macrophages; MLNC: mesenteric lymph node cells.
The effects of probiotics on different tissues in animal models via autophagy.
| Probiotics | Tissue/disease | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bifidobacterium breve | Intestine | Probiotics modify protein degradation programs within the intestinal epithelial cells to promote their survival during stress. | [ |
| Bacillus | Intestine | Probiotics improved growth performance via increasing intestinal autophagy. | [ |
| Lactobacillus | Intestinal injury gastroenteritis | Probiotics reduced autophagy marker expression to normal levels and partially prevented virus-induced tissue damage. | [ |
| L. plantarum, B. and S. cerevisiae | Intestine | Probiotic feeding improved the growth, immune function, and intestinal health in weaned piglets. | [ |
| Bacillus (SC06 or SC080 | Intestine |
| [ |
| Lactobacillus | Intestine | Probiotics supplementation protected LPS-induced intestinal barrier dysfunction via attenuating apoptosis and autophagy via mTOR signaling pathway. | [ |
| B. dentium | Intestine | Probiotics enhanced the intestinal mucus layer and goblet cell function via upregulation of gene expression and autophagy signaling pathways. | [ |
| LAB | Intestine | Probiotics caused anti-infection and anti-inflammation via inducing autophagy. | [ |
| Lactobacillus rhamnosus, Pediococcus acidilactici, Bifidobacterium adolescentis | Cardiac tissue | Oral administration of probiotics provided cardiac protection via regulation of fibrosis and autophagy. | [ |
| SLAB51 | Alzheimer disease | Prebiotic treatment by activating autophagy decreased the brain damage and cognitive decline in Alzheimeric mice. | [ |
| Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) are produced by the intestinal microbiota | Kidney |
| [ |
| ZJ617 | Liver |
| [ |
| Golden bifid | Placenta | Oral supplementation with golden bifid induced placental protection via reducing the autophagy-related protein Beclin1. | [ |
| Lactobacillus rhamnosus | Zebrafish | Parental | [ |
| Lactobacillus rhamnosus | Ovarian follicles | Probiotics modulated the balance between apoptosis and autophagy and improved the follicular survival. | [ |
| Lactobacillus salivarius AR809 | Pharyngeal epithelium | AR809 prevents S. aureus-induced pharyngeal inflammatory response, possibly by regulating mTOR signaling pathway-related autophagy. | [ |
SLAB51: a formulation made of nine live bacterial strains [Streptococcus thermophilus, Bifidobacteria (B. longum, B. breve, B. infantis), Lactobacillus (L. acidophilus, L. plantarum, L. paracasei, L. delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus, L. brevis)]; LAB: lactic acid bacteria; ZJ617: Lactobacillus reuteri.
Figure 2Schematic summary of probiotics effects via autophagy on different cell lines and tissues.