精氨酸
肠道通透性
热疗
内分泌学
内科学
单调的工作
医学
磁导率
化学
生物化学
氨基酸
膜
作者
Kátia Anunciação Costa,Anne Danieli Nascimento Soares,Samuel Penna Wanner,Rosana das Graças Carvalho dos Santos,Simone Odília Antunes Fernandes,Flaviano S. Martins,Jacques R. Nicoli,Cândido Celso Coimbra,Valbert Nascimento Cardoso
标识
DOI:10.3945/jn.113.183186
摘要
Dietary supplementation with L-arginine has been shown to improve the intestinal barrier in many experimental models. This study investigated the effects of arginine supplementation on the intestinal permeability and bacterial translocation (BT) induced by prolonged physical exercise under heat stress. Under anesthesia, male Swiss mice (5-wk-old) were implanted with an abdominal sensor to record their core body temperature (TCORE). After recovering from surgery, the mice were divided into 3 groups: a non-supplemented group that was fed the standard diet formulated by the American Institute of Nutrition (AIN-93G; control), a non-supplemented group that was fed the AIN-93G diet and subjected to exertional hyperthermia (H-NS), and a group supplemented with L-arginine at 2% and subjected to exertional hyperthermia (H-Arg). After 7 d of treatment, the H-NS and H-Arg mice were forced to run on a treadmill (60 min, 8 m/min) in a warm environment (34°C). The control mice remained at 24°C. Thirty min before the exercise or control trials, the mice received a diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA) solution labeled with technetium-99m (99mTc-DTPA) or 99mTc-Escherichia coli by gavage to assess intestinal permeability and BT, respectively. The H-NS mice terminated the exercise with Tcore values of ∼40°C, and, 4 h later, presented a 12-fold increase in the blood uptake of 99mTc-DTPA and higher bacterial contents in the blood and liver than the control mice. Although supplementation with arginine did not change the exercise-induced increase in Tcore, it prevented the increases in intestinal permeability and BT caused by exertional hyperthermia. Our results indicate that dietary L-arginine supplementation preserves the integrity of the intestinal epithelium during exercise under heat stress, acting through mechanisms that are independent of Tcore regulation.
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