• Helping 'good' gut bacteria and clearing

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Wed Jun 21 22:30:28 2023
    Helping 'good' gut bacteria and clearing out the 'bad' -- all in one
    treatment

    Date:
    June 21, 2023
    Source:
    American Chemical Society
    Summary:
    Probiotics can help maintain a healthy gut microbiome or
    restore populations of 'good bacteria' after a heavy course of
    antibiotics. But now, they could also be used as an effective
    treatment strategy for certain intestinal diseases, such as Crohn's
    disease. Researchers have developed a microgel delivery system
    for probiotics that keeps 'good' bacteria safe while actively
    clearing out 'bad' ones. In mice, the system treated intestinal
    inflammation without side effects.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Probiotics can help maintain a healthy gut microbiome or restore
    populations of "good bacteria" after a heavy course of antibiotics. But
    now, they could also be used as an effective treatment strategy for
    certain intestinal diseases, such as Crohn's disease. Researchers
    reporting in ACS Central Science have developed a microgel delivery system
    for probiotics that keeps "good" bacteria safe while actively clearing out "bad" ones. In mice, the system treated intestinal inflammation without
    side effects.

    In the digestive system, there's a delicate balance of bacterial
    populations.

    When this balance is disrupted, bad bacteria can take over the colon,
    causing it to swell, resulting in colitis. Certain diseases, including inflammatory bowel disease and Crohn's disease, involve chronic colitis
    and currently require immunosuppressants to treat them. These drugs are expensive and non- specific, sometimes giving rise to antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

    An alternative strategy is to deliver beneficial bacteria, or probiotics,
    to help restore balance. But to reach the colon, a treatment must first
    pass through stomach acid, withstand being cleared out by the intestine,
    then fight for space alongside the numerous invading bacteria. Pairing probiotics with a drug delivery system could make this strategy
    feasible, though most current approaches simply protect the probiotics
    from digestion without affecting the microbes responsible for the
    condition. So, Zhenzhong Zhang, Junjie Liu, Jinjin Shi and colleagues
    wanted to combine probiotics with specialized microgel spheres that
    could not only protect the good bacteria, but also actively help clear
    out the bad.

    To create their system, the researchers combined sodium alginate, tungsten
    and calcium-containing nanoparticles into small, spherical microgels,
    then coated them with beneficial, probiotic bacteria. The gels protected
    the bacteria as they made their way through the stomach and increased
    their retention time in the colon. Once there, calprotectin proteins --
    highly expressed during colitis -- bound to the calcium and disassembled
    the gels, allowing the tungsten to escape. By displacing molybdenum in
    a key enzyme substrate of the bad bacterium Enterobacteriaceae, tungsten inhibited the microbe's growth while leaving the probiotics unaffected. In experiments using a colitis mouse model, the system allowed probiotics
    to proliferate in the intestine without any side effects.

    Additionally, mice with the microgel spheres did not exhibit many of
    the hallmarks of colitis, such as shortened colons or damaged intestinal barriers, showing that the delivery system could be a viable treatment strategy. Though the researchers also want to prove its utility in more advanced preclinical models, they say that this work provides a new
    perspective into treatments using colonizing probiotics.

    The authors acknowledge funding from the National Natural Science
    Foundation of China, the Outstanding Youth Foundation of Henan Province
    and the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Health_&_Medicine
    # Gastrointestinal_Problems # Colitis # Crohn's_Disease
    # Pharmacology
    o Matter_&_Energy
    # Solar_Energy # Nanotechnology # Robotics_Research #
    Ultrasound
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o South_Beach_diet o Parasympathetic_nervous_system o
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    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by American_Chemical_Society. Note:
    Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Jiali Yang, Mengyun Peng, Shaochong Tan, Shengchan Ge, Li Xie,
    Tonghai
    Zhou, Wei Liu, Kaixiang Zhang, Zhenzhong Zhang, Junjie Liu,
    Jinjin Shi.

    Calcium Tungstate Microgel Enhances the Delivery and
    Colonization of Probiotics during Colitis via Intestinal
    Ecological Niche Occupancy. ACS Central Science, 2023; DOI:
    10.1021/acscentsci.3c00227 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/06/230621105419.htm

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