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Oral Administration of , a Bacteria Increased With Green Tea Consumption, Promotes Recovery From Acute Colitis in Mice Suppression of IL-17. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • FP (a type of bacterium) is involved in breaking down catechins from green tea in the gut, but its immune regulatory effects are not well understood.
  • Administering green tea increases the presence of FP in the gut, and studies on mice showed that giving FP orally for 10 days resulted in less colonic inflammation compared to untreated mice.
  • The study found that FP not only reduced inflammation but also inhibited IL-17 signaling, with lipoteichoic acid from FP being the key component that helps suppress this inflammatory process, suggesting FP could be a cheap and effective treatment for gut issues.

Article Abstract

(FP) has been reported to participate in the metabolism of catechins in the human gut. However, there is limited information on the immune regulatory effects of this bacterium. We confirmed that the administration of green tea increases the abundance of FP in the gut microbiota and investigated the effect of FP in a mouse colitis model. Mice were orally administered FP for 10 consecutive days; colonic inflammation was evaluated daily on the basis of stool consistency, gross rectal bleeding, and body weight. In the dextran sodium sulfate model, FP-exposed animals exhibited lower levels of inflammation and strong inhibition of interleukin (IL)-17 signaling. Moreover, lipoteichoic acid from FP was identified as the active component mediating IL-17 suppression. Thus, oral administration of FP appears to modulate gut inflammation and represents a viable and inexpensive oral microbial therapeutic.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7890079PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2020.610946DOI Listing

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