AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the protective effects of oral insulin on gut epithelial cells damaged by methotrexate (MTX) in rats, aiming to understand its role in intestinal health.
  • The research involved three groups of rats: a control group, an MTX-treated group, and an MTX group supplemented with oral insulin after MTX administration, with various measures taken to assess intestinal damage and recovery.
  • Results showed that while oral insulin did not prevent initial mucositis, it improved recovery by enhancing cell proliferation and reducing apoptosis in the intestine.

Article Abstract

Objective: Oral insulin (INS) has been shown to protect intestinal epithelial cells from injury caused by ischemia-reperfusion and endotoxemia. In the present study, we tested whether oral insulin can protect gut epithelial cells from methotrexate (MTX)-induced intestinal damage.

Materials And Methods: Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into 3 experimental groups. Control rats were treated with normal saline given intraperitoneally (CONTR), MTX rats were treated with a single dose (20 microg/kg) of MTX given intraperitoneally, and MTX-INS rats were treated with oral insulin given in drinking water (1 U/mL) 72 hours after IP injection of a single dose of MTX (similar to MTX rats). Three days after either MTX or saline injection, rats were killed. Intestinal mucosal damage (Park injury score), mucosal structural changes, enterocyte proliferation, and enterocyte apoptosis were measured. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction was used to determine the level of bax and bcl-2 mRNA expression.

Results: MTX-INS rats demonstrated a greater jejunal and ileal mucosal weight, ileal mucosal DNA, greater jejunal villus height, greater jejunal and ileal crypt depth, greater enterocyte proliferation index in ileum, and lower enterocyte apoptosis in ileum than did MTX-nontreated animals. Treatment with insulin did not change the injury score grade in comparison with MTX animals. A significant decrease in cell apoptosis was observed in MTX-INS rats (vs MTX) and also a decrease in a bax mRNA expression and decrease in a bax/bcl-2 ratio.

Conclusions: In a rat model of MTX-induced mucositis, oral insulin supplementation does not prevent mucosal injury but improves intestinal recovery and enhances enterocyte survival.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MPG.0b013e31806008f1DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

oral insulin
20
enterocyte apoptosis
12
rats treated
12
mtx-ins rats
12
greater jejunal
12
epithelial cells
8
rats
8
mtx rats
8
single dose
8
injury score
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!