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Trolox and Ascorbic Acid Reduce Direct and Indirect Oxidative Stress in the IPEC-J2 Cells, an In Vitro Model for the Porcine Gastrointestinal Tract

Oxidative stress in the small intestinal epithelium is a major cause of barrier malfunction and failure to regenerate. This study presents a functional in vitro model using the porcine small intestinal epithelial cell line IPEC-J2 to examine the effects of oxidative stress and to estimate the antiox...

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Autores principales: Vergauwen, Hans, Tambuyzer, Bart, Jennes, Karen, Degroote, Jeroen, Wang, Wei, De Smet, Stefaan, Michiels, Joris, Van Ginneken, Chris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4351986/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25745867
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120485
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author Vergauwen, Hans
Tambuyzer, Bart
Jennes, Karen
Degroote, Jeroen
Wang, Wei
De Smet, Stefaan
Michiels, Joris
Van Ginneken, Chris
author_facet Vergauwen, Hans
Tambuyzer, Bart
Jennes, Karen
Degroote, Jeroen
Wang, Wei
De Smet, Stefaan
Michiels, Joris
Van Ginneken, Chris
author_sort Vergauwen, Hans
collection PubMed
description Oxidative stress in the small intestinal epithelium is a major cause of barrier malfunction and failure to regenerate. This study presents a functional in vitro model using the porcine small intestinal epithelial cell line IPEC-J2 to examine the effects of oxidative stress and to estimate the antioxidant and regenerative potential of Trolox, ascorbic acid and glutathione monoethyl ester. Hydrogen peroxide and diethyl maleate affected the tight junction (zona occludens-1) distribution, significantly increased intracellular oxidative stress (CM-H(2)DCFDA) and decreased the monolayer integrity (transepithelial electrical resistance and FD-4 permeability), viability (neutral red) and wound healing capacity (scratch assay). Trolox (2 mM) and 1 mM ascorbic acid pre-treatment significantly reduced intracellular oxidative stress, increased wound healing capacity and reduced FD-4 permeability in oxidatively stressed IPEC-J2 cell monolayers. All antioxidant pre-treatments increased transepithelial electrical resistance and viability only in diethyl maleate-treated cells. Glutathione monoethyl ester (10 mM) pre-treatment significantly decreased intracellular oxidative stress and monolayer permeability only in diethyl maleate-treated cells. These data demonstrate that the IPEC-J2 oxidative stress model is a valuable tool to screen antioxidants before validation in piglets.
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spelling pubmed-43519862015-03-17 Trolox and Ascorbic Acid Reduce Direct and Indirect Oxidative Stress in the IPEC-J2 Cells, an In Vitro Model for the Porcine Gastrointestinal Tract Vergauwen, Hans Tambuyzer, Bart Jennes, Karen Degroote, Jeroen Wang, Wei De Smet, Stefaan Michiels, Joris Van Ginneken, Chris PLoS One Research Article Oxidative stress in the small intestinal epithelium is a major cause of barrier malfunction and failure to regenerate. This study presents a functional in vitro model using the porcine small intestinal epithelial cell line IPEC-J2 to examine the effects of oxidative stress and to estimate the antioxidant and regenerative potential of Trolox, ascorbic acid and glutathione monoethyl ester. Hydrogen peroxide and diethyl maleate affected the tight junction (zona occludens-1) distribution, significantly increased intracellular oxidative stress (CM-H(2)DCFDA) and decreased the monolayer integrity (transepithelial electrical resistance and FD-4 permeability), viability (neutral red) and wound healing capacity (scratch assay). Trolox (2 mM) and 1 mM ascorbic acid pre-treatment significantly reduced intracellular oxidative stress, increased wound healing capacity and reduced FD-4 permeability in oxidatively stressed IPEC-J2 cell monolayers. All antioxidant pre-treatments increased transepithelial electrical resistance and viability only in diethyl maleate-treated cells. Glutathione monoethyl ester (10 mM) pre-treatment significantly decreased intracellular oxidative stress and monolayer permeability only in diethyl maleate-treated cells. These data demonstrate that the IPEC-J2 oxidative stress model is a valuable tool to screen antioxidants before validation in piglets. Public Library of Science 2015-03-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4351986/ /pubmed/25745867 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120485 Text en © 2015 Vergauwen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vergauwen, Hans
Tambuyzer, Bart
Jennes, Karen
Degroote, Jeroen
Wang, Wei
De Smet, Stefaan
Michiels, Joris
Van Ginneken, Chris
Trolox and Ascorbic Acid Reduce Direct and Indirect Oxidative Stress in the IPEC-J2 Cells, an In Vitro Model for the Porcine Gastrointestinal Tract
title Trolox and Ascorbic Acid Reduce Direct and Indirect Oxidative Stress in the IPEC-J2 Cells, an In Vitro Model for the Porcine Gastrointestinal Tract
title_full Trolox and Ascorbic Acid Reduce Direct and Indirect Oxidative Stress in the IPEC-J2 Cells, an In Vitro Model for the Porcine Gastrointestinal Tract
title_fullStr Trolox and Ascorbic Acid Reduce Direct and Indirect Oxidative Stress in the IPEC-J2 Cells, an In Vitro Model for the Porcine Gastrointestinal Tract
title_full_unstemmed Trolox and Ascorbic Acid Reduce Direct and Indirect Oxidative Stress in the IPEC-J2 Cells, an In Vitro Model for the Porcine Gastrointestinal Tract
title_short Trolox and Ascorbic Acid Reduce Direct and Indirect Oxidative Stress in the IPEC-J2 Cells, an In Vitro Model for the Porcine Gastrointestinal Tract
title_sort trolox and ascorbic acid reduce direct and indirect oxidative stress in the ipec-j2 cells, an in vitro model for the porcine gastrointestinal tract
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4351986/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25745867
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120485
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