1. Gastric emptying is involved inLactobacilluscolonisation in mouse stomach
- Author
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Yuraporn Sahasakul, Kei Sonoyama, and Naoki Takemura
- Subjects
Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Acylated ghrelin ,Mouse Stomach ,Mice ,Lactobacillus ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Food science ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,biology ,Gastric emptying ,Stomach ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,biology.organism_classification ,Bacterial Load ,Ghrelin ,Diet ,Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms ,Colonisation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gastric Emptying ,Lactobacilli ,Plasma concentration ,Ampicillin ,Female ,Hormone - Abstract
Lactobacilli are indigenous microbes of the stomach of rodents, with much lower numbers being present in mice fed a purified diet than in those fed a non-purified diet. We postulated that gastric emptying (GE) is responsible for the different colonisation levels of lactobacilli and tested this hypothesis in the present study. BALB/cCr Slc mice were fed either a non-purified diet or a purified diet for 2 weeks. The number of gastric tissue-associated lactobacilli was lower in mice fed the purified diet than in those fed the non-purified diet. GE, estimated by measuring the food recovered from the stomach, was higher in mice fed the purified diet than in those fed the non-purified diet and correlated negatively with the number of lactobacilli. Mice fed the non-purified diet exhibited lower GE rates even when lactobacilli were eliminated by ampicillin administration through the drinking-water, suggesting that GE is the cause but not the consequence of differentLactobacilluscolonisation levels. The plasma concentrations of acylated ghrelin, a gastric hormone that promotes GE, were higher in mice fed the purified diet than in those fed the non-purified diet. There was a negative correlation between GE and the number of lactobacilli in mice fed the non-purified diet, the purified diet, and the purified diet supplemented with sugarbeet fibre (200 g/kg diet) or carboxymethyl cellulose (40 g/kg diet). We propose that a higher GE rate contributes, at least in part, to lower gastric colonisation levels of lactobacilli in mice fed a purified diet.
- Published
- 2014
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