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Intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in Salmonella-infected rats

BACKGROUND: Glutathione, the main antioxidant of intestinal epithelial cells, is suggested to play an important role in gut barrier function and prevention of inflammation-related oxidative damage as induced by acute bacterial infection. Most studies on intestinal glutathione focus on oxidative stre...

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Autores principales: van Ampting, Marleen TJ, Schonewille, Arjan J, Vink, Carolien, Brummer, Robert Jan M, Meer, Roelof van der, Bovee-Oudenhoven, Ingeborg MJ
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2678068/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19374741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6793-9-6
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author van Ampting, Marleen TJ
Schonewille, Arjan J
Vink, Carolien
Brummer, Robert Jan M
Meer, Roelof van der
Bovee-Oudenhoven, Ingeborg MJ
author_facet van Ampting, Marleen TJ
Schonewille, Arjan J
Vink, Carolien
Brummer, Robert Jan M
Meer, Roelof van der
Bovee-Oudenhoven, Ingeborg MJ
author_sort van Ampting, Marleen TJ
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Glutathione, the main antioxidant of intestinal epithelial cells, is suggested to play an important role in gut barrier function and prevention of inflammation-related oxidative damage as induced by acute bacterial infection. Most studies on intestinal glutathione focus on oxidative stress reduction without considering functional disease outcome. Our aim was to determine whether depletion or maintenance of intestinal glutathione changes susceptibility of rats to Salmonella infection and associated inflammation. Rats were fed a control diet or the same diet supplemented with buthionine sulfoximine (BSO; glutathione depletion) or cystine (glutathione maintenance). Inert chromium ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid (CrEDTA) was added to the diets to quantify intestinal permeability. At day 4 after oral gavage with Salmonella enteritidis (or saline for non-infected controls), Salmonella translocation was determined by culturing extra-intestinal organs. Liver and ileal mucosa were collected for analyses of glutathione, inflammation markers and oxidative damage. Faeces was collected to quantify diarrhoea. RESULTS: Glutathione depletion aggravated ileal inflammation after infection as indicated by increased levels of mucosal myeloperoxidase and interleukin-1β. Remarkably, intestinal permeability and Salmonella translocation were not increased. Cystine supplementation maintained glutathione in the intestinal mucosa but inflammation and oxidative damage were not diminished. Nevertheless, cystine reduced intestinal permeability and Salmonella translocation. CONCLUSION: Despite increased infection-induced mucosal inflammation upon glutathione depletion, this tripeptide does not play a role in intestinal permeability, bacterial translocation and diarrhoea. On the other hand, cystine enhances gut barrier function by a mechanism unlikely to be related to glutathione.
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spelling pubmed-26780682009-05-07 Intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in Salmonella-infected rats van Ampting, Marleen TJ Schonewille, Arjan J Vink, Carolien Brummer, Robert Jan M Meer, Roelof van der Bovee-Oudenhoven, Ingeborg MJ BMC Physiol Research Article BACKGROUND: Glutathione, the main antioxidant of intestinal epithelial cells, is suggested to play an important role in gut barrier function and prevention of inflammation-related oxidative damage as induced by acute bacterial infection. Most studies on intestinal glutathione focus on oxidative stress reduction without considering functional disease outcome. Our aim was to determine whether depletion or maintenance of intestinal glutathione changes susceptibility of rats to Salmonella infection and associated inflammation. Rats were fed a control diet or the same diet supplemented with buthionine sulfoximine (BSO; glutathione depletion) or cystine (glutathione maintenance). Inert chromium ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid (CrEDTA) was added to the diets to quantify intestinal permeability. At day 4 after oral gavage with Salmonella enteritidis (or saline for non-infected controls), Salmonella translocation was determined by culturing extra-intestinal organs. Liver and ileal mucosa were collected for analyses of glutathione, inflammation markers and oxidative damage. Faeces was collected to quantify diarrhoea. RESULTS: Glutathione depletion aggravated ileal inflammation after infection as indicated by increased levels of mucosal myeloperoxidase and interleukin-1β. Remarkably, intestinal permeability and Salmonella translocation were not increased. Cystine supplementation maintained glutathione in the intestinal mucosa but inflammation and oxidative damage were not diminished. Nevertheless, cystine reduced intestinal permeability and Salmonella translocation. CONCLUSION: Despite increased infection-induced mucosal inflammation upon glutathione depletion, this tripeptide does not play a role in intestinal permeability, bacterial translocation and diarrhoea. On the other hand, cystine enhances gut barrier function by a mechanism unlikely to be related to glutathione. BioMed Central 2009-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC2678068/ /pubmed/19374741 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6793-9-6 Text en Copyright © 2009 van Ampting et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
van Ampting, Marleen TJ
Schonewille, Arjan J
Vink, Carolien
Brummer, Robert Jan M
Meer, Roelof van der
Bovee-Oudenhoven, Ingeborg MJ
Intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in Salmonella-infected rats
title Intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in Salmonella-infected rats
title_full Intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in Salmonella-infected rats
title_fullStr Intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in Salmonella-infected rats
title_full_unstemmed Intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in Salmonella-infected rats
title_short Intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in Salmonella-infected rats
title_sort intestinal barrier function in response to abundant or depleted mucosal glutathione in salmonella-infected rats
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2678068/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19374741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6793-9-6
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