Back to Search Start Over

Altered hepatic and intestinal homeostasis in a neonatal murine model of shortterm total parenteral nutrition and antibiotics.

Authors :
Mims, Tahliyah S.
Kumari, Roshan
Leathem, Cameron
Antunes, Karen
Joseph, Sydney
Mei-I Yen
Ferstl, Danielle
Jamieson, Sophia M.
Sabbar, Austin
Biebel, Claudia
Lazarevic, Nikolai
Willis, Nathaniel B.
Henry, Lydia
Chi-Liang E. Yen
Smith, Joseph P.
Gosain, Ankush
Meisel, Marlies
Willis, Kent A.
Talati, Ajay J.
Elabiad, Mohammad. T.
Source :
American Journal of Physiology: Gastrointestinal & Liver Physiology. Dec2023, Vol. 325 Issue 6, pG556-G569. 14p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Parenteral nutrition (PN) prevents starvation and supports metabolic requirements intravenously when patients are unable to be fed enterally. Clinically, infants are frequently provided PN in intensive care settings along with exposure to antibiotics (ABX) to minimize infection during care. Unfortunately, neonates experience extremely high rates of hepatic complications. Adult rodent and piglet models of PN are well-established but neonatal models capable of leveraging the considerable transgenic potential of the mouse remain underdeveloped. Utilizing our newly established neonatal murine PN mouse model, we administered ABX or controlled drinking water to timed pregnant dams to disrupt the maternal microbiome. We randomized mouse pups to PN or sham surgery controls +/- ABX exposure. ABX or short-term PN decreased liver and brain organ weights, intestinal length, and mucosal architecture (vs. controls). PN significantly elevated evidence of hepatic proinflammatory markers, neutrophils and macrophage counts, bacterial colony-forming units, and evidence of cholestasis risk, which was blocked by ABX. However, ABX uniquely elevated metabolic regulatory genes resulting in accumulation of hepatocyte lipids, triglycerides, and elevated tauro-chenoxycholic acid (TCDCA) in serum. Within the gut, PN elevated the relative abundance of Akkermansia, Enterococcus, and Suterella with decreased Anaerostipes and Lactobacillus compared with controls, whereas ABX enriched Proteobacteria. We conclude that short-term PN elevates hepatic inflammatory stress and risk of cholestasis in early life. Although concurrent ABX exposure protects against hepatic immune activation during PN, the dual exposure modulates metabolism and may contribute toward early steatosis phenotype, sometimes observed in infants unable to wean from PN. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study successfully established a translationally relevant, murine neonatal parenteral nutrition (PN) model. Short-term PN is sufficient to induce hepatitis-associated cholestasis in a neonatal murine model that can be used to understand disease in early life. The administration of antibiotics during PN protects animals from bacterial translocation and proinflammatory responses but induces unique metabolic shifts that may predispose the liver toward early steatosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01931857
Volume :
325
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology: Gastrointestinal & Liver Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174173899
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.00129.2023