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Active Vitamin D<sub>3</sub> Treatment Attenuated Bacterial Translocation via Improving Intestinal Barriers in Cirrhotic Rats

Pei‐Chang Lee, Yun‐Chen Hsieh, Teh‐Ia Huo, Ueng‐Cheng Yang, Chao‐Hsiung Lin, Chung‐Pin Li, Yi‐Hsiang Huang, Ming‐Chih Hou, Han‐Chieh Lin, Kuei‐Chuan Lee

2020Molecular Nutrition & Food Research31 citationsDOI

Abstract

SCOPE: Pathological bacterial translocation from the disrupted intestinal barrier leads to substantial complications and mortality in liver cirrhosis. Vitamin D is reported as beneficial to gut barriers in some animal models. However, its effect on cirrhotic bacterial translocation is unknown. The authors aim to investigate the effects of calcitriol on bacterial translocation in cirrhotic rats. METHODS AND RESULTS: per day) or vehicle by oral gavage after thioacetamide (TAA) injection for 16 weeks. Bacterial translocation, gut permeability, gut microbiota, and associated mechanisms are investigated. Calcitriol treatment significantly attenuates bacterial translocation and reduces intestinal permeability in TAA-induced cirrhotic rats. It upregulates the expressions of occludin in the small intestine and claudin-1 in the colon of cirrhotic rats directly independent of intrahepatic status. Even when a short period of calcitriol treatment do not reduce intestinal bacterial overgrowth, it induces a remarkable change of bacterial diversities and enrichment of Muribaculaceae, Bacteroidales, Allobaculum, Anaerovorax, and Ruminococcaceae. CONCLUSION: Calcitriol treatment attenuates intestinal permeability, reduces bacterial translocation, and enriches potentially beneficial gut microbiota in cirrhotic rats that may enable it as a potential therapeutic agent to prevent cirrhotic complications.

Topics & Concepts

Bacterial translocationChromosomal translocationMedicineVitaminVitamin D and neurologyChemistryMicrobiologyGastroenterologyInternal medicineBiologyBiochemistryGeneLiver Disease Diagnosis and TreatmentLiver Disease and TransplantationDiet and metabolism studies