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Glutamine Restores Tight Junction Protein Claudin-1 Expression in Colonic Mucosa of Patients With Diarrhea-Predominant Irritable Bowel Syndrome.

Julien Bertrand, Ibtissem Ghouzali, Charlène Guérin, Christine Bôle-Feysot, Mélodie Gouteux et al.
Other JPEN. Journal of parenteral and enteral nutrition 2016 44 trích dẫn
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Loại nghiên cứu
Controlled Clinical Trial
Đối tượng nghiên cứu
Diarrhea-predominant IBS patients
Can thiệp
Glutamine Restores Tight Junction Protein Claudin-1 Expression in Colonic Mucosa of Patients With Diarrhea-Predominant Irritable Bowel Syndrome. glutamine
Đối chứng
healthy controls
Kết quả chính
claudin-1 expression in colonic mucosa
Xu hướng hiệu quả
Positive
Nguy cơ sai lệch
Moderate

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent studies showed that patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D) had an increased intestinal permeability as well as a decreased expression of tight junctions. Glutamine, the major substrate of rapidly dividing cells, is able to modulate intestinal permeability and tight junction expression in other diseases. We aimed to evaluate, ex vivo, glutamine effects on tight junction proteins, claudin-1 and occludin, in the colonic mucosa of patients with IBS-D. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twelve patients with IBS-D, diagnosed with the Rome III criteria, were included (8 women/4 men, aged 40.7 ± 6.9 years). Colonic biopsy specimens were collected and immediately incubated for 18 hours in culture media with increasing concentrations of glutamine from 0.6-10 mmol/L. Claudin-1 and occludin expression was then measured by immunoblot, and concentrations of cytokines were assessed by multiplex technology. Claudin-1 expression was affected by glutamine (P < .05, analysis of variance). In particularly, 10 mmol/L glutamine increased claudin-1 expression compared with 0.6 mmol/L glutamine (0.47 ± 0.04 vs 0.33 ± 0.03, P < .05). In contrast, occludin expression was not significantly modified by glutamine. Interestingly, glutamine effect was negatively correlated to claudin-1 (Pearson r = -0.83, P < .001) or occludin basal expression (Pearson r = -0.84, P < .001), suggesting that glutamine had more marked effects when tight junction protein expression was altered. Cytokine concentrations in culture media were not modified by glutamine treatment. CONCLUSION: Glutamine increased claudin-1 expression in the colonic mucosa of patients with IBS-D. In addition, glutamine effect seems to be dependent on basal expression of tight junction proteins.

Tóm lược

Glutamine increased claudin-1 expression in the colonic mucosa of patients with IBS-D, and this effect seems to be dependent on basal expression of tight junction proteins.

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