Ex Vivo Faecal Fermentation of human Ileal Fluid Collected After Wild Strawberry Consumption Modulates Human Microbiome Community Structure and Metabolic Output and Protects Against DNA Damage in Colonic Epithelial Cells

2021 ◽  
pp. 2100405
Author(s):  
Camilla Diotallevi ◽  
Massimiliano Fontana ◽  
Cheryl Latimer ◽  
Nigel G. Ternan ◽  
L. Kirsty Pourshahidi ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 109 (43) ◽  
pp. E2949-E2955 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. B. Kim ◽  
R. K. Pandita ◽  
U. Eskiocak ◽  
P. Ly ◽  
A. Kaisani ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 274 (5) ◽  
pp. L714-L720 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sue Buckley ◽  
Lora Barsky ◽  
Barbara Driscoll ◽  
Kenneth Weinberg ◽  
Kathryn D. Anderson ◽  
...  

Apoptosis is a genetically controlled cellular response to developmental stimuli and environmental insult that culminates in cell death. Sublethal hyperoxic injury in rodents is characterized by a complex but reproducible pattern of lung injury and repair during which the alveolar surface is damaged, denuded, and finally repopulated by type 2 alveolar epithelial cells (AEC2). Postulating that apoptosis might occur in AEC2 after hyperoxic injury, we looked for the hallmarks of apoptosis in AEC2 from hyperoxic rats. A pattern of increased DNA end labeling, DNA laddering, and induction of p53, p21, and Bax proteins, strongly suggestive of apoptosis, was seen in AEC2 cultured from hyperoxic rats when compared with control AEC2. In contrast, significant apoptosis was not detected in freshly isolated AEC2 from oxygen-treated rats. Thus the basal culture conditions appeared to be insufficient to ensure the ex vivo survival of AEC2 damaged in vivo. The oxygen-induced DNA strand breaks were blocked by the addition of 20 ng/ml of keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) to the culture medium from the time of plating and were partly inhibited by Matrigel or a soluble extract of Matrigel. KGF treatment resulted in a partial reduction in the expression of the p21, p53, and Bax proteins but had no effect on DNA laddering. We conclude that sublethal doses of oxygen in vivo cause damage to AEC2, resulting in apoptosis in ex vivo culture, and that KGF can reduce the oxygen-induced DNA damage. We speculate that KGF plays a role as a survival factor in AEC2 by limiting apoptosis in the lung after acute hyperoxic injury.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuchen Guo ◽  
Monica Gabola ◽  
Rossano Lattanzio ◽  
Conception Paul ◽  
Valérie Pinet ◽  
...  

AbstractTo clarify the function of cyclin A2 in colon homeostasis and colorectal cancer (CRC) we generated mice deficient for cyclin A2 in colonic epithelial cells (CEC). Colons of those mice displayed architectural changes in the mucosa, and signs of inflammation as well as an increased proliferation of CEC associated with the appearance of low- and high-grade dysplasia. The main initial events triggering those alterations in cyclin A2 deficient CEC appear to be abnormal mitoses and DNA damage. Cyclin A2 deletion in CEC promoted the development of dysplasia and adenocarcinomas in the murine colitis-associated cancer model. We next explored the status of cyclin A2 expression in clinical CRC samples at the mRNA and protein level and found higher expression in tumors of stage I and II patients compared to those of stage III and IV. A meta-analysis of 11 transcriptome datasets comprising 2,239 primary CRC tumors displayed differentCCNA2(the mRNA coding for cyclin A2) expression levels among the CRC tumor subtypes with highest in CMS1 and lowest in CMS4. Moreover, high expression ofCCNA2was found to be a good prognosis factor independently from other prognostic factors for the CMS1, CMS3 and CMS4 subtypes.


Redox Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 101862
Author(s):  
Sara Dobani ◽  
Cheryl Latimer ◽  
Gordon J. McDougall ◽  
J. William Allwood ◽  
Gema Pereira-Caro ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorenzo Corrales Yolanda ◽  
Haug Berg Kristiane ◽  
Noer Agate ◽  
R. Collins Andrew ◽  
Nicolaissen Bjørn
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Eliana B. Souto ◽  
Joana R. Campos ◽  
Raquel Da Ana ◽  
Carlos Martins-Gomes ◽  
Amélia M. Silva ◽  
...  

Genotoxicity screening tests aim to evaluate if and to what extent a compound in contact with the human body (e.g., a drug molecule, a compound from the environment) interacts with DNA. The comet assay is a sensitive method used to predict the risk of DNA damage in individual cells, as it quantifies the tape breaks, being the alkaline version (pH > 13) the most commonly used in the laboratory. Epithelial cells serve as biomatrices in genotoxicity assessments. As ca. 80% of solid cancers are of epithelial origin, the quantification of the DNA damage upon exposure of epithelial cells to a drug or drug formulation becomes relevant. Comet assays run in epithelial cells also have clinical applications in human biomonitoring, which assesses whether and to what extent is the human body exposed to environmental genotoxic compounds and how such exposure changes over time. Ocular mucosa is particularly exposed to environmental assaults. This review summarizes the published data on the genotoxicity assessment in estimating DNA damage in epithelial cells with a special focus on ocular cell lines. General comet assay procedures for ex vivo and in vivo epithelium samples are also described.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 1149
Author(s):  
Federica Sodano ◽  
Bice Avallone ◽  
Monica Tizzano ◽  
Chiara Fogliano ◽  
Barbara Rolando ◽  
...  

In our previous studies, a ketorolac–galactose conjugate (ketogal) showed prolonged anti-inflammatory and analgesic activity, causing less gastric ulcerogenic effect and renal toxicity than its parent drug ketorolac. In order to demonstrate the safer profile of ketogal compared to ketorolac, histopathological changes in the small intestine and liver using three staining techniques before and after repeated oral administration in mice with ketorolac or an equimolecular dose of its galactosylated prodrug ketogal were assessed. Cytotoxicity and oxidative stress parameters were evaluated and compared in ketorolac- and ketogal-treated Human Primary Colonic Epithelial cells at different concentrations and incubation times. Evidence of mitochondrial oxidative stress was found after ketorolac treatment; this was attributable to altered mitochondrial membrane depolarization and oxidative stress parameters. No mitochondrial damage was observed after ketogal treatment. In ketorolac-treated mice, severe subepithelial vacuolation and erosion with inflammatory infiltrates and edematous area in the intestinal tissues were noted, as well as alterations in sinusoidal spaces and hepatocytes with foamy cytoplasm. In contrast, treatment with ketogal provided a significant improvement in the morphology of both organs. The prodrug clearly demonstrated a safer profile than its parent drug both in vitro and ex vivo, confirming that ketogal is a strategic alternative to ketorolac.


2016 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Lorenzo Corrales ◽  
K. Haug Berg ◽  
A. Noer ◽  
A.R. Collins ◽  
B. Nicolaissen
Keyword(s):  

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