Prebiotics counteract the morphological and functional changes secondary to chronic cisplatin exposition in the proximal colon of mice.
Cristina BiagioniChiara TrainiMaria Simonetta Faussone-PellegriniEglantina IdrizajMaria Caterina BaccariMaria Giuliana VannucchiPublished in: Journal of cellular and molecular medicine (2024)
Cisplatin is an antimitotic drug able to cause acute and chronic gastrointestinal side effects. Acute side effects are attributable to mucositis while chronic ones are due to neuropathy. Cisplatin has also antibiotic properties inducing dysbiosis which enhances the inflammatory response, worsening local damage. Thus, a treatment aimed at protecting the microbiota could prevent or reduce the toxicity of chemotherapy. Furthermore, since a healthy microbiota enhances the effects of some chemotherapeutic drugs, prebiotics could also improve this drug effectiveness. We investigated whether chronic cisplatin administration determined morphological and functional alterations in mouse proximal colon and whether a diet enriched in prebiotics had protective effects. The results showed that cisplatin caused lack of weight gain, increase in kaolin intake, decrease in stool production and mucus secretion. Prebiotics prevented increases in kaolin intake, changes in stool production and mucus secretion, but had no effect on the lack of weight gain. Moreover, cisplatin determined a reduction in amplitude of spontaneous muscular contractions and of Connexin (Cx)43 expression in the interstitial cells of Cajal, changes that were partially prevented by prebiotics. In conclusion, the present study shows that daily administration of prebiotics, likely protecting the microbiota, prevents most of the colonic cisplatin-induced alterations.
Keyphrases
- weight gain
- drug induced
- body mass index
- birth weight
- inflammatory response
- weight loss
- liver failure
- physical activity
- oxidative stress
- randomized controlled trial
- induced apoptosis
- respiratory failure
- poor prognosis
- cell proliferation
- radiation therapy
- intensive care unit
- gestational age
- hepatitis b virus
- toll like receptor
- adipose tissue
- atomic force microscopy
- body composition
- long non coding rna
- resistance training
- high fat diet induced
- resting state