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The anti‐inflammatory and antiapoptotic effects of probiotic on induced neurotoxicity in juvenile hamsters
- Source :
- Food Science & Nutrition, Vol 9, Iss 9, Pp 4874-4882 (2021), Food Science & Nutrition
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Brain inflammation and apoptosis play crucial roles in the pathogenesis of various neurodevelopmental disorders. Probiotics have been shown to confer protection against many stresses, including apoptosis and inflammation, by modulating the gut function. The short‐chain fatty acid, propionic acid (PPA), plays an important intermediate of cellular metabolism. Although PPA exhibits numerous beneficial biological effects, its accumulation is neurotoxic. This study focused on the therapeutic potency of probiotics against PPA‐induced apoptosis and neuroinflammation in hamsters. Five groups of male golden Syrian hamsters were treated as follows: Group I as control; Group II as PPA‐treated with three doses of 250 mg PPA/kg/day; Group III as clindamycin‐treated with a single dose of 30 mg clindamycin/kg; Group IV as PPA–probiotic; and Group V as clindamycin–probiotic were two therapeutic groups which were treated with the same doses of PPA and clindamycin, respectively, followed by treatment with 0.2 g kg‐1 d−1 of probiotic (ProtexinR, Probiotics International Limited) for three weeks. Proapoptotic markers, such as caspases 3 and 7; neuroinflammation markers, such as interleukins 1β and 8; and heat shock protein 70 were measured in the brain. Significant increase of all measured markers (p ˂ .001) was observed in PPA and clindamycin‐treated hamsters compared with controls. Probiotics significantly reduced the damages and ameliorated all the test markers in both therapeutic groups compared with the control. Our results confirmed that probiotics can be utilized as a feasible strategy for managing apoptotic and inflammation‐related stresses in brain disorders by retaining the gut function.<br />This study ascertained the role of neuroinflammation and apoptosis as neurotoxic effects in the PPA‐induced rodent model of autism. Clindamycin showed relatively fewer neurotoxic effects compared with orally administered PPA. Moreover, our study showed that probiotics exert ameliorative effects and may be used as a novel noninvasive and safe treatment strategy.
- Subjects :
- medicine.drug_class
propionic acid
heat shock protein
Inflammation
Pharmacology
Anti-inflammatory
law.invention
Probiotic
law
Heat shock protein
medicine
TX341-641
Neuroinflammation
Caspase
Original Research
biology
business.industry
Nutrition. Foods and food supply
Neurotoxicity
apoptosis
respiratory system
clindamycin
medicine.disease
cytokines
Apoptosis
biology.protein
medicine.symptom
business
Food Science
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20487177
- Volume :
- 9
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Food Science & Nutrition
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6367b829cc323ae5478878d293744f84