Increased concentration of ferrous iron in the gastrointestinal tract increases the number of various pathogens and induces inflammation. LPS and/or high-fat diet-associated metaflammation is mediated through a quaternary receptor signaling complex containing iron-regulated pathway, IL-6/STAT inflammatory signaling pathway, hepcidin regulatory pathway, and common TLR4/NF-κB signaling pathway. We, therefore, investigated whether bifidobacteria directly or indirectly ameliorate LPS- and/or high-fat diet-associated metaflammation by reduction of intestinal iron concentration and/or the above-mentioned pathways.
Material & methods: We used a triple co-culture model of HT-29/B6, HMDM and HepG2 cells with apically added Bifidobacterium pseudolongum (DSMZ 20099), in the absence or presence of iron, LPS or oleate. Expressions of the biomarkers of interest were determined after 24 h incubation by TaqMan qRT-PCR, cell-based ELISA or Western blot.
Results: Bifidobacteria inhibited LPS- and oleate-induced protein expression of inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, TNF-α) concomitantly with decreases in cellular TG and iron concentration. Exposure of co-cultured cells to bifidobacteria blocked NF-kB activity through inhibition of IκBα, p38 MAPK, and phosphorylation of NF-kB 65 subunit. TaqMan qRT-PCR and Western blot analysis revealed that bifidobacteria downregulated mRNA and protein expression of BMP6, DMT1, hepcidin, l-ferritin, ferroportin, IL-6, TfR1, Stat3, and TLR4 following exposure to excessive extracellular LPS, oleate and iron. However, the patterns of TLR2 mRNA and protein expression were quite the opposite of those of TLR4.
Conclusion: Commensal bifidobacteria ameliorate metaflammation/inflammatory responses to excessive extracellular LPS, oleate and iron through at least two molecular/signaling mechanisms: i. modulation of interactions of the hepcidin- and iron-signaling pathways via reduction of excess iron; ii. reduction of pro-inflammatory cytokines and hepcidin production through inhibition of the TLR4/NF-kB pathway. This may be a molecular basis by which commensal bifidobacteria enhance intrinsic cellular tolerance against excess consumption of energy-yielding substrates and/or free iron.
Keywords: Bifidobacteria; Hepcidin; IL-6; Iron; Metaflammation.
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