AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic exposure to food-grade titanium dioxide (E171) raises health concerns due to its potential inflammatory effects and ability to promote gut lesions.
  • Researchers studied how TiO is absorbed in the intestines of mice, finding peak absorption in certain areas at 4 hours post-administration before it dropped, while some absorption continued to occur in the Peyer's patches at 8 hours.
  • The study identified that significantly more TiO absorption happens via pathways related to goblet cells and that blocking certain tight junctions greatly reduces absorption, indicating complex mechanisms of uptake in the gut.

Article Abstract

Background: Food-grade TiO (E171 in the EU) is widely used as a coloring agent in foodstuffs, including sweets. Chronic dietary exposure raises concerns for human health due to proinflammatory properties and the ability to induce and promote preneoplastic lesions in the rodent gut. Characterization of intestinal TiO uptake is essential for assessing the health risk in humans. We studied in vivo the gut absorption kinetics of TiO in fasted mice orally given a single dose (40 mg/kg) to assess the ability of intestinal apical surfaces to absorb particles when available without entrapment in the bolus. The epithelial translocation pathways were also identified ex vivo using intestinal loops in anesthetized mice.

Results: The absorption of TiO particles was analyzed in gut tissues by laser-reflective confocal microscopy and ICP-MS at 4 and 8 h following oral administration. A bimodal pattern was detected in the small intestine: TiO absorption peaked at 4 h in jejunal and ileal villi before returning to basal levels at 8 h, while being undetectable at 4 h but significantly present at 8 h in the jejunal Peyer's patches (PP). Lower absorption occurred in the colon, while TiO particles were clearly detectable by confocal microscopy in the blood at 4 and 8 h after treatment. Ex vivo, jejunal loops were exposed to the food additive in the presence and absence of pharmacological inhibitors of paracellular tight junction (TJ) permeability or of transcellular (endocytic) passage. Thirty minutes after E171 addition, TiO absorption by the jejunal villi was decreased by 66% (p < 0.001 vs. control) in the presence of the paracellular permeability blocker triaminopyrimidine; the other inhibitors had no significant effect. Substantial absorption through a goblet cell (GC)-associated pathway, insensitive to TJ blockade, was also detected.

Conclusions: After a single E171 dose in mice, early intestinal uptake of TiO particles mainly occurred through the villi of the small intestine, which, in contrast to the PP, represent the main absorption surface in the small intestine. A GC-associated passage and passive diffusion through paracellular TJ spaces between enterocytes appeared to be major absorption routes for transepithelial uptake of dietary TiO.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7345522PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12989-020-00357-zDOI Listing

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