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Paraprobiotics and Postbiotics of Lactobacillus delbrueckii CIDCA 133 Mitigate 5-FU-Induced Intestinal Inflammation.

Viviane Lima BatistaLuís Cláudio Lima De JesusLaísa Macedo TavaresFernanda Lima Alvarenga BarrosoLucas Jorge da Silva FernandesAndria Dos Santos FreitasMonique Ferrary AmericoMariana Martins DrumondPamela Mancha-AgrestiEnio FerreiraJuliana Guimarães LagunaLuiz Carlos Junior AlcantaraVasco Ariston de Carvalho Azevedo
Published in: Microorganisms (2022)
Intestinal mucositis is a commonly reported side effect in oncology practice. Probiotics are considered an excellent alternative therapeutic approach to this debilitating condition; however, there are safety questions regarding the viable consumption of probiotics in clinical practice due to the risks of systemic infections, especially in immune-compromised patients. The use of heat-killed or cell-free supernatants derived from probiotic strains has been evaluated to minimize these adverse effects. Thus, this work evaluated the anti-inflammatory properties of paraprobiotics (heat-killed) and postbiotics (cell-free supernatant) of the probiotic Lactobacillus delbrueckii CIDCA 133 strain in a mouse model of 5-Fluorouracil drug-induced mucositis. Administration of paraprobiotics and postbiotics reduced the neutrophil cells infiltrating into the small intestinal mucosa and ameliorated the intestinal epithelium architecture damaged by 5-FU. These ameliorative effects were associated with a downregulation of inflammatory markers ( Tlr2 , Nfkb1 , Il12 , Il17a , Il1b , Tnf ), and upregulation of immunoregulatory Il10 cytokine and the epithelial barrier markers Ocln , Cldn1 , 2 , 5 , Hp and Muc2 . Thus, heat-killed L. delbrueckii CIDCA 133 and supernatants derived from this strain were shown to be effective in reducing 5-FU-induced inflammatory damage, demonstrating them to be an alternative approach to the problems arising from the use of live beneficial microorganisms in clinical practice.
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