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Oral administration of probiotic bacteria,<i>Lactobacillus casei</i>and<i>Bifidobacterium breve</i>, does not exacerbate neurological symptoms in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis
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Citations
32
References
2009
Year
Laboratory ImmunologyImmunologyHuman Multiple SclerosisOral AdministrationProbioticsBacterial PathogensMedical MicrobiologyProbioticStrain YakultInfection ControlNeuroimmunologyAutoimmune DiseaseNeurological SymptomsAutoimmunityClinical MicrobiologyMicrobial DiseasePathogenesisMicrobiologyMultiple SclerosisMedicineProbiotic Bacteria
To evaluate the safety of two probiotic bacterial strains, Lactobacillus casei strain Shirota (LcS) and Bifidobacterium breve strain Yakult (BbY), these probiotics were orally administered to Lewis rats with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), the experimental model of human multiple sclerosis. We examined three experimental designs by combining different antigen types and probiotic administration periods: (1) EAE was induced with a homogenate of guinea pig spinal cord as the sensitizing antigen, and LcS was orally administered from one week before this sensitization until the end of the experiment; (2) EAE was induced using guinea pig originated myelin basic protein (MBP) as the sensitizing antigen, and LcS was orally administered from one week before this sensitization to the end of the experiment; (3) EAE was induced using guinea pig MBP as the sensitizing antigen, and the probiotic strains (LcS and BbY) were administered starting in infancy (two weeks old) and continued until the end of the experiment. In experiment 1, oral administration of LcS tended to suppress the development of neurological symptoms. Differences in neurological symptoms between the control group and the administration groups did not reach statistical significance in experiments 2 and 3. These results support the notion that neither LcS nor BbY exacerbates autoimmune disease.
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