Affiliation:
1. Clinical Pharmacology Department, Faculty of Medicine Ain Shams University Cairo Egypt
2. Internal Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine Ain Shams University Cairo Egypt
3. Medical Physiology Department, Faculty of Medicine Cairo University Cairo Egypt
4. Histology and Cell Biology Department, Faculty of Medicine Ain Shams University Cairo Egypt
Abstract
AbstractIrritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a global gastrointestinal disorder closely related to psychological stress exposure and local colonic inflammation. Herein, we investigated the effect of wrap‐restraint stress (WRS) on rat behavior, on adenosine monophosphate‐activated protein kinase–mammalian/mechanistic target of rapamycin–signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (AMPK–mTOR–STAT3) signaling, and autophagy in colonic mucosa. The impact of chronic administration of vitamin D3 and lactoferrin was compared. Twenty‐four male Wistar rats were randomly divided into four groups. Chronic WRS protocol was applied as a rodent model of IBS. Group I: naïve animals, Group II: WRS animals, Group III: WRS‐exposed and treated with vitamin D3 (500 IU/kg/day), and Group IV: WRS‐exposed and treated with lactoferrin (300 mg/kg/day). In this study, we found that chronic administration of each of vitamin D3 and lactoferrin resulted in a significant increase in social interaction test, interleukin‐10, AMPK, optical density of LC3B, goblet cell count and marked decrease in serum cortisol level, STAT3, inflammatory cell count, and optical density of mTOR in comparison to the WRS rats. Our findings suggest that both vitamin D3 and Lactoferrin could augment colonic autophagy through enhanced AMPK expression and inhibition of mTOR–STAT3 signaling, which offers practical insights into their clinical use in the prevention and therapy of IBS. However, lactoferrin intake as a nutritional supplement could be more helpful for stress‐induced colitis treatment than vitamin D3.
Subject
Cell Biology,Clinical Biochemistry,General Medicine,Biochemistry
Cited by
3 articles.
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