Therapeutic effects of fecal microbial transplantation on alcoholic liver injury in rat models - 16/10/24

Highlights |
• | FMT treatment can alleviate liver injury in ALD rats;. |
• | FMT can restore gut microbiota and maintain intestinal mucosal barrier function. |
• | FMT can alleviate liver injury by reversing metabolic disorders in ALD rats. |
Abstract |
Objective |
Disruption of gut microbiota is closely related to the progression of alcoholic liver disease (ALD). This study aimed to explore the therapeutic effect of fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) in ALD rats using a combination of microbiological and metabolomic techniques.
Methods |
Three liver injury rat models were constructed using alcohol, CCL4, and alcohol combined with CCL4, and administered an FMT treatment comprising the fecal microbiota of healthy rats via the gastric route for 12 consecutive weeks. We measured the therapeutic effect of FMT treatment on liver inflammation, intestinal mucosal barrier, and bacterial translocation in ALD rats using 16S rRNA and UPLC-Q/TOF-MS technology to detect the effects of FMT on the intestinal microbiota and metabolic patterns of ALD rats.
Results |
FMT treatment effectively improved liver function, prolonged survival time, improved the intestinal mucosal barrier, reduced bacterial translocation, alleviated liver inflammation, and delayed the progression of liver fibrosis in three types of liver injury models. The microbiome and metabolomic results showed that FMT can effectively improve gut microbiota disorder in ALD rats and improve metabolic patterns by regulating metabolic pathways such as the arachidonic acid and retinol pathways.
Conclusion |
FMT treatment could reverse alcohol induced liver injury by improving gut microbiota and metabolic patterns in ALD rats, and oral FMT could be an effective therapeutic approach for ALD.
Il testo completo di questo articolo è disponibile in PDF.Keywords : Alcoholic liver injury, Fecal microbial transplantation, Microbiomics, Metabolomics
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Vol 48 - N° 9
Articolo 102478- Novembre 2024 Ritorno al numeroBenvenuto su EM|consulte, il riferimento dei professionisti della salute.
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