PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Spatial Localization and Binding of the Probiotic Lactobacillus farciminis to the Rat Intestinal Mucosa: Influence of Chronic Stress.

  • Stéphanie Da Silva,
  • Catherine Robbe-Masselot,
  • Arthur Raymond,
  • Myriam Mercade-Loubière,
  • Christel Salvador-Cartier,
  • Bélinda Ringot,
  • Renaud Léonard,
  • Isabelle Fourquaux,
  • Afifa Ait-Belgnaoui,
  • Pascal Loubière,
  • Vassilia Théodorou,
  • Muriel Mercier-Bonin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136048
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. e0136048

Abstract

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The present study aimed at detecting the exogenously applied probiotic Lactobacillus farciminis in rats, after exposure to IBS-like chronic stress, based on 4-day Water Avoidance Stress (WAS). The presence of L. farciminis in both ileal and colonic mucosal tissues was demonstrated by FISH and qPCR, with ileum as the preferential niche, as for the SFB population. A different spatial distribution of the probiotic was observed: in the ileum, bacteria were organized in micro-colonies more or less close to the epithelium whereas, in the colon, they were mainly visualized far away from the epithelium. When rats were submitted to WAS, the L. farciminis population substantially decreased in both intestinal regions, due to a stress-induced increase in colonic motility and defecation, rather than a modification of bacterial binding to the intestinal mucin Muc2.