AI Article Synopsis

  • Excessive ethanol consumption can lead to organ dysfunction by causing oxidative stress, immune system changes, and gut microbiome imbalance.
  • Short-chain fatty acids, especially butyrate, play a crucial role in gut health and inflammation, with butyrate deficiency linked to intestinal injury.
  • Research indicates that tributyrin supplementation helps preserve immune responses and reduce oxidative stress in the colon of mice subjected to chronic-binge ethanol exposure, potentially protecting intestinal health.

Article Abstract

Excessive ethanol consumption causes adverse effects and contributes to organ dysfunction. Ethanol metabolism triggers oxidative stress, altered immune function, and gut dysbiosis. The gut microbiome is known to contribute to the maintenance of intestinal homeostasis, and disturbances are associated with pathology. A consequence of gut dysbiosis is also alterations in its metabolic and fermentation byproducts. The gut microbiota ferments undigested dietary polysaccharides to yield short-chain fatty acids, predominantly acetate, propionate, and butyrate. Butyrate has many biological mechanisms of action including anti-inflammatory and immunoprotective effects, and its depletion is associated with intestinal injury. We previously showed that butyrate protects gut-liver injury during ethanol exposure. While the intestine is the largest immune organ in the body, little is known regarding the effects of ethanol on intestinal immune function. This work is aimed at investigating the effects of butyrate supplementation, in the form of the structured triglyceride tributyrin, on intestinal innate immune responses and oxidative stress following chronic-binge ethanol exposure in mice. Our work suggests that tributyrin supplementation preserved immune responses and reduced oxidative stress in the proximal colon during chronic-binge ethanol exposure. Our results also indicate a possible involvement of tributyrin in maintaining the integrity of intestinal villi vasculature disrupted by chronic-binge ethanol exposure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6120279PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/9671919DOI Listing

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