AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a damaging inflammatory condition, and this study explores the potential anti-inflammatory effects of ghee butter from bovine colostrum (GBBC) on a mouse model of AP.
  • Mice were subjected to induced AP via L-arginine injections, then treated with GBBC, revealing significant reductions in pancreatic enzyme activity and severity of tissue damage compared to untreated mice.
  • The anti-inflammatory benefits of GBBC appear to involve fatty acid receptors (FFAR1 and FFAR4), marking it as the first study to highlight the potential of this nutritional supplement in treating AP.

Article Abstract

Acute pancreatitis (AP) is an inflammatory disease that causes severe tissue damage. Ghee butter from bovine colostrum (GBBC) is a clarified butter produced by heating milk fat to 40 °C and separating the precipitating protein. As colostrum mainly contains fatty acids (FAs), immunoglobulins, maternal immune cells, and cytokines, we hypothesized that it may exert anti-inflammatory effects. We investigated the effects of GBBC on experimental AP in mice. Two intraperitoneal () injections of L-arginine (8%) were given 1 h apart to generate the AP murine model. After 12 h from the first L-arginine injection, mice were divided into the following experimental groups: AP mice treated with GBBC (oral gavage () every 12 h) and non-treated AP mice ( vehicle every 12 h). Control animals received vehicle only. At 72 h, mice were euthanized. Histopathological examination along with myeloperoxidase (MPO) and amylase/lipase activity assays were performed. In a separate set of experiments, FFAR1 and FFAR4 antagonists were used to verify the involvement of respective receptors. Administration of GBBC decreased MPO activity in the pancreas and lungs along with the microscopical severity of AP in mice. Moreover, treatment with GBBC normalized pancreatic enzyme activity. FFAR1 and FFAR4 antagonists tended to reverse the anti-inflammatory effect of GBBC in mouse AP. Our results suggest that GBBC displays anti-inflammatory effects in the mouse model of AP, with the putative involvement of FFARs. This is the first study to show the anti-inflammatory potential of a nutritional supplement derived from GBBC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8468552PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13093271DOI Listing

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