Abstract

Certain foods are known as “heating” foods in Chinese medicine. Over-consumption of these foods can lead to symptoms known as “heating up”. These symptoms have been shown to be symptoms of systemic low-grade inflammation. However, the mechanism by which these foods cause inflammation is not clear. In this preliminary study, we investigated dysbacteriosis of the gut microbiota as a possible cause of inflammation by litchi, a typical “heating” food. A human flora-associated (HFA) mouse model (donor: n = 1) was constructed. After gavaging the mice with litchi extract suspension at low, medium and high doses (400, 800, 1600 mg/kg·d−1, respectively) (n = 3) for 7 days, the serum levels of inflammatory cytokines, gut microbiota, the concentration of SCFAs and the integrity of the intestinal mucosal barrier were measured. The results revealed significant increases in the abundance of Prevotella and Bacteroides. A significant increase in the abundance of Bilophila and a decrease in Megasomonas was observed in the high-dose group. High-dose litchi intervention led to a decrease of most SCFA levels in the intestine. It also caused a more than two-fold increase in the serum TNF-α level and LPS level but a decrease in the IL-1β and IL-6 levels. Medium- and high-dose litchi intervention caused widening of the intestinal epithelial cell junction complex and general weakening of the intestinal mucosal barrier as well as reduced energy conversion efficiency of the gut microbiota. These data suggest that litchi, when consumed excessively, can lead to a low degree of systematic inflammation and this is linked to its ability to cause dysbacteriosis of the gut microbiota, decrease SCFAs and weaken the intestinal mucosal tissues.

Highlights

  • 64 were found for the control group; 663 specific Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU) were found for the medium-dose group while 75 were found for the control group; 227 specific OTUs were found for the high-dose group while 143 were found for the control group. These results indicate that litchi intervention caused significant increases in the species richness (p < 0.05) and greater increases occurred with low and medium doses of litchi intervention compared to the high dose

  • The results demonstrated that litchi intervention significantly increased the diversity and species richness of the gut microbiota of mice, but the effect was much greater with low-dose litchi than high-dose litchi

  • How litchi extract affects the formation of Short-Chain Fatty Acids (SCFA) in the intestine and what exact component makes it work requires further study. This preliminary study demonstrated that litchi intervention in human flora-associated (HFA) mice can significantly alter the gut microflora, induce inflammation and cause damage to the intestinal mucosal tissues of mice

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Certain foods, such as litchi, longan, mango, durian, orange, chili, pepper, etc., are known as “heating” foods in traditional Chinese medicine. Many studies have shown that systemic low-grade inflammation has a direct causal relationship with the occurrence and development of many important chronic diseases in humans, including cancer, diabetes, liver diseases, inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome, allergies, asthma, autism, depression, Alzheimer’s disease and aging [7–9]. It has become one of the focal issues in the field of medicine, health and nutrition

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call