4.1 Article

Comparative study of sodium bicarbonate- and magnesium hydroxide-based gastric antacids for the effectiveness of Salmonella delivered Brucella antigens against wild type challenge in BALB/c mice

Journal

PATHOGENS AND DISEASE
Volume 79, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femspd/ftab002

Keywords

Salmonella; antacid formulation; gastric survival; immune response; sodium bicarbonate; magnesium hydroxide

Funding

  1. Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Education [2019R1A6A1A03033084]

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Magnesium hydroxide has greater, stable, and prolonged buffering capacity compared to sodium bicarbonate, and is safer for oral administration. Oral administration of sodium bicarbonate led to discomfort and muscle tremors, while mice treated with magnesium hydroxide were completely normal. Co-administration of Salmonella attenuated strains with Brucella antigens and either bicarbonate-citric acid or magnesium hydroxide-based neutralizing buffers significantly enhanced protective immune responses.
We compared the effects of two antacid formulations based on sodium bicarbonate and magnesium hydroxide on a Salmonella-delivered oral Brucella live attenuated vaccine. We conducted a series of in vitro and in vivo experiments to investigate the pH buffering capacity, buffering longevity and the effects of these formulations on the survival of Salmonella under neutralized pH conditions and its impact on immune responses. Magnesium hydroxide had a greater, stable and prolonged buffering capacity than sodium bicarbonate and was safer when administered orally. Oral administration of sodium bicarbonate resulted in discomfort as reflected by mouse behavior and mild muscle tremors, whereas mice treated with magnesium hydroxide and PBS were completely normal. Gastric survival studies using BALB/c mice revealed that a higher number of Salmonella reached the intestine when the magnesium hydroxide-based antacid buffer was administrated. Co-administration with attenuated Salmonella secreting Brucella antigens, SodC and Omp19 along with individual antacid formulations, significantly enhanced the antigen-specific protective immune responses against virulent Brucella challenge. Together, our results indicated that the pre vaccinated oral administration of bicarbonate-citric acid or magnesium hydroxide-based neutralizing buffers significantly counteract stomach acidity by maintaining the viability of an oral enteric vaccine formulation.

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