Research
Helpful Bacteria
Part 2
Fecal water genotoxicity is predictive of tumor-preventive
activities by inulin-like oligofructoses, probiotics (Lactobacillus
rhamnosus and Bifidobacterium lactis), and
their synbiotic combination
Abstract
Klinder
A, Forster A, Caderni G, Femia AP, Pool-Zobel BL.
Department
of Nutritional Toxicology, Institute for Nutrition, Friedrich
Schiller University, Jena, Germany.
The
measurement of fecal water genotoxicity in human colon cells
could be a useful biomarker to study effects of diet in
the colon. Here we assessed aqueous fecal extracts of samples
from a chronic study with rats fed prebiotics, probiotics,
and their combination. Treatments were maltodextrins (controls),
inulin/oligofructoses (prebiotic), Lactobacillus rhamnosus,
and Bifidobacterium lactis (probiotics) or both
(synbiotic). Azoxymethane (AOM) was administered to initiate
tumors. Rat feces were collected at 0 and 10 days and 2,
4, and 8 mo, and cecal contents were collected at 8 mo.
Aqueous phases were prepared and tested for genotoxicity
in HT29 colon cells using the comet assay. The studied types
of intervention reduced fecal and cecal genotoxicity. DNA
damage by samples from AOM-treated, tumor-free rats was
significantly lower than from tumor-bearing animals, especially
after 4 mo of synbiotic and prebiotic interventions. Inulin-based
diets reduced exposure to genotoxins in the feces, directly
reflecting the reported reduction of tumor incidence in
these animals. Evidence is provided for the validity of
this measurement as a biomarker of chemoprevention because
1) fecal water genotoxicity reflected genotoxic exposure
in the cecum, 2) tumor incidence and fecal genotoxicity
were directly related, and 3) these interventions reduced
tumor risks by reducing exposure to genotoxins in the gut.
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