Pancreatic juice protects gut from pathogenic bacteria
(2003) International Symposium on Energy and Protein Metabolism and Nutrition 109. p.303-305- Abstract
- The role of the exocrine pancreas in regulating gut microflora colonization is unclear. The main objective in the present study was to assess the affect of pancreatic fluid on the growth of pathogenic bacteria and fungi. Pancreatic juice samples used in the study were obtained from nine eight-week old weaned pigs in which catheters were implanted in the pancreatic duct. The antibacterial activity of pure pig pancreatic juice collected from healthy, conscious and also anaesthetized pigs was investigated with multi-resistant microbial isolates and non-pathogenic strains. Studies were performed on 23 bacterial and 2 Candida albicans isolates, including 4 lactic acid bacteria (LAB) and 3 reference strains. Pancreatic juice was effective... (More)
- The role of the exocrine pancreas in regulating gut microflora colonization is unclear. The main objective in the present study was to assess the affect of pancreatic fluid on the growth of pathogenic bacteria and fungi. Pancreatic juice samples used in the study were obtained from nine eight-week old weaned pigs in which catheters were implanted in the pancreatic duct. The antibacterial activity of pure pig pancreatic juice collected from healthy, conscious and also anaesthetized pigs was investigated with multi-resistant microbial isolates and non-pathogenic strains. Studies were performed on 23 bacterial and 2 Candida albicans isolates, including 4 lactic acid bacteria (LAB) and 3 reference strains. Pancreatic juice was effective (p<0.01) against multidrug resistant bacterial pathogens, whereas other strains had only moderate sensitivity (p<0.05) to its antibacterial action and furthermore LAB were insensitive. The antibacterial action was independent of pancreatic juice proteolytic activity and stable when measured before and after enterokinase activation of trypsinogen. We demonstrated in vitro, that the antibacterial properties of pancreatic juice last for several hours. Our data suggests that broth composition may modulate the intensity of pancreatic juice antibacterial activity in vitro; this can have implications for digestive related antibacterial activity in vivo. Thus, pancreatic juice antibacterial activity may be an important factor in limiting the colonization of pathogenic bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract, in both the small and the large intestines. We postulate that observed antibacterial activity of the pancreatic juice could play an important role as one of the factor of innate immunity. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1407082
- author
- Kruszewska, Danuta LU ; Ljungh, Åsa LU and Pierzynowski, Stefan LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2003
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- pancreas, innate immunity
- host publication
- Progress in Research on Energy and Protein Metabolism
- volume
- 109
- pages
- 303 - 305
- publisher
- Wageningen Academic Publishers
- conference name
- International Symposium on Energy and Protein Metabolism and Nutrition
- conference location
- Rostock, Germany
- conference dates
- 2003-09-13 - 2003-09-18
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000186518200052
- ISSN
- 0071-2477
- ISBN
- 978-90-76998-24-4
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- d10fede6-b3cd-4c21-9dc1-1417ab61667d (old id 1407082)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 16:57:26
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 20:45:29
@inproceedings{d10fede6-b3cd-4c21-9dc1-1417ab61667d, abstract = {{The role of the exocrine pancreas in regulating gut microflora colonization is unclear. The main objective in the present study was to assess the affect of pancreatic fluid on the growth of pathogenic bacteria and fungi. Pancreatic juice samples used in the study were obtained from nine eight-week old weaned pigs in which catheters were implanted in the pancreatic duct. The antibacterial activity of pure pig pancreatic juice collected from healthy, conscious and also anaesthetized pigs was investigated with multi-resistant microbial isolates and non-pathogenic strains. Studies were performed on 23 bacterial and 2 Candida albicans isolates, including 4 lactic acid bacteria (LAB) and 3 reference strains. Pancreatic juice was effective (p<0.01) against multidrug resistant bacterial pathogens, whereas other strains had only moderate sensitivity (p<0.05) to its antibacterial action and furthermore LAB were insensitive. The antibacterial action was independent of pancreatic juice proteolytic activity and stable when measured before and after enterokinase activation of trypsinogen. We demonstrated in vitro, that the antibacterial properties of pancreatic juice last for several hours. Our data suggests that broth composition may modulate the intensity of pancreatic juice antibacterial activity in vitro; this can have implications for digestive related antibacterial activity in vivo. Thus, pancreatic juice antibacterial activity may be an important factor in limiting the colonization of pathogenic bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract, in both the small and the large intestines. We postulate that observed antibacterial activity of the pancreatic juice could play an important role as one of the factor of innate immunity.}}, author = {{Kruszewska, Danuta and Ljungh, Åsa and Pierzynowski, Stefan}}, booktitle = {{Progress in Research on Energy and Protein Metabolism}}, isbn = {{978-90-76998-24-4}}, issn = {{0071-2477}}, keywords = {{pancreas; innate immunity}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{303--305}}, publisher = {{Wageningen Academic Publishers}}, title = {{Pancreatic juice protects gut from pathogenic bacteria}}, volume = {{109}}, year = {{2003}}, }