Regulation of microglial inflammatory response by sodium butyrate and short-chain fatty acids.

Br J Pharmacol

Department of Neuroscience and Neurology, University of Kuopio, PO Box 1627, FIN-70211 Kuopio, Finland.

Published: March 2004

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies suggest that sodium butyrate and other SCFAs can prevent inflammation in colon diseases, prompting research into their effects on neural inflammation.
  • In experiments, sodium butyrate showed strong anti-inflammatory effects in primary microglial cells and certain brain cultures, while paradoxically enhancing inflammation in a transformed microglial cell line (N9).
  • The findings indicate that sodium butyrate may induce an adaptive anti-inflammatory response in some neural models, but its effects can vary depending on the type of microglial cells involved.

Article Abstract

1. Recent studies have shown that sodium butyrate and other short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) can prevent inflammation in colon diseases. Our aim was to elucidate whether sodium butyrate and SCFAs regulate the inflammatory responses in different neural inflammation models in cell cultures. 2. Inflammatory responses to LPS-induced microglial activation were recorded by the secretion of nitric oxide (NO) and cytokines IL-6 and TNF-alpha and related to the changes in the DNA-binding activities of NF-kappaB complex. 3. We observed that sodium butyrate is strongly anti-inflammatory against LPS-induced responses in rat primary microglia as well as in hippocampal slice cultures and in neural cocultures of microglial cells, astrocytes and cerebellar granule neurons. 4. In murine N9 microglial cell line, instead, sodium butyrate and other SCFAs (propionate, valerate and caproate) enhanced the LPS-induced inflammatory response. 5. The pretreatment with butyrate before LPS exposure induced an equal or more enhanced response than simultaneous exposure with butyrate and LPS. This indicates that butyrate induces an adaptative response against microglial activation. 6. We also observed that butyrate treatment both in transformed N9 cells and in hippocampal slice cultures downregulates the NF-kappaB-binding capacity induced by LPS stimulation. 7. Our results show that butyrate is anti-inflammatory in primary, brain-derived microglial cells, as observed recently in colon diseases, but proinflammatory in transformed, proliferating N9 microglial cells, which may be related to the anticancer properties of butyrate observed in tumor cells.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1574260PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0705682DOI Listing

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