Modeling undernutrition with enteropathy in mice.
Emmeline SalamehMarine JarbeauFanny B MorelMamane ZeilaniMoutaz AzizPierre DéchelotteRachel Marion-LetellierPublished in: Scientific reports (2020)
Undernutrition is a global health issue leading to 1 out 5 all deaths in children under 5 years. Undernutrition is often associated with environmental enteric dysfunction (EED), a syndrome associated with increased intestinal permeability and gut inflammation. We aimed to develop a novel murine model of undernutrition with these EED features. Post-weaning mice were fed with low-protein diet (LP) alone or combined with a gastrointestinal insult trigger (indomethacin or liposaccharides). Growth, intestinal permeability and inflammation were assessed. LP diet induced stunting and wasting in post-weaning mice but did not impact gut barrier. We therefore combined LP diet with a single administration of indomethacin or liposaccharides (LPS). Indomethacin increased fecal calprotectin production while LPS did not. To amplify indomethacin effects, we investigated its repeated administration in addition to LP diet and mice exhibited stunting and wasting with intestinal hyperpermeability and gut inflammation. The combination of 3-weeks LP diet with repeated oral indomethacin administration induced wasting, stunting and gut barrier dysfunction as observed in undernourished children with EED. As noninvasive methods for investigating gut function in undernourished children are scarce, the present pre-clinical model provides an affordable tool to attempt to elucidate pathophysiological processes involved in EED and to identify novel therapeutic strategies.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- high fat diet induced
- weight loss
- physical activity
- young adults
- global health
- inflammatory response
- endothelial cells
- public health
- diabetic rats
- mechanical ventilation
- metabolic syndrome
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- type diabetes
- wild type
- mass spectrometry
- high glucose
- anti inflammatory
- rheumatoid arthritis
- high resolution
- intensive care unit
- case report
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- atomic force microscopy
- single molecule
- life cycle
- high speed