Lactobacillus paracaseiReduces Intestinal Inflammation in Adoptive Transfer Mouse Model of Experimental Colitis

Author:

Oliveira Manuel12,Bosco Nabil12,Perruisseau Genevieve12,Nicolas Jeanne12,Segura-Roggero Iris12,Duboux Stéphane3,Briand Muriel3,Blum Stéphanie12,Benyacoub Jalil12

Affiliation:

1. Nutrition and Health Department, Nestlé Research Center, CH 1000 Lausanne, Switzerland

2. Food Immunology Group, Vers-chez-les-Blanc, CH 1000 Lausanne 26, Switzerland

3. Bioanalytical Sciences Department, Nestlé Research Center, CH 1000 Lausanne, Switzerland

Abstract

Studies showed that specific probiotics provide therapeutic benefits in inflammatory bowel disease.In vitroevidence suggested thatLactobacillus paracaseialso called ST11 (CNCM I-2116) is a potent strain with immune modulation properties. However, little is known about its capacity to alleviate inflammatory symptomsin vivoIn this context, the main objective of this study was to investigate the role of ST11 on intestinal inflammation using the adoptive transfer mouse model of experimental colitis. Rag2-/-recipient mice were fed with ST11 (109CFU/day)a month prior toinduce colitis by adoptive transfer of naive T cells. One month later, in clear contrast to nonfed mice, weight loss was significantly reduced by 50% in ST11-fed mice. Further analysis of colon specimens revealed a significant reduction neutrophil infiltration and mucosal expression of IL1β, IL-6, and IL12 proinflammatory cytokines, whereas no consistent differences in expression of antibacterial peptides or tight junction proteins were observed between PBS and ST11-fed mice. All together, our results demonstrate that oral administration of ST11 was safe and had a significant preventive effect on colitis. We conclude that probiotics such asLactobacillus paracaseiharbor worthwhilein vivoimmunomodulatory properties to prevent intestinal inflammation by nutritional approaches.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Medicine,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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