4.7 Article

Fucoidan from Sargassum hemiphyllum inhibits infection and inflammation of Helicobacter pylori

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-04151-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 105-2622-B-019-002-CC2, MOST 106-2622-B-019-001-CC2]

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The fucoidan from Sargassum hemiphyllum has been found to significantly reduce H. pylori infection without developing drug resistance. Fucoidan acts as a strong anti-inflammatory agent and inhibits the adhesion of H. pylori to host cells, thereby reducing the infection rate.
Having infected by Helicobacter pylori, the infection often leads to gastritis, gastric ulcer, or even gastric cancer. The disease is typically treated with antibiotics as they used to effectively inhibit or kill H. pylori, thus reducing the incidence of gastric adenoma and cancer to significant extent. H. pylori, however, has developed drug resistance to many clinically used antibiotics over the years, highlighting the crisis of antibiotic failure during the H. pylori treatment. We report here that the fucoidan from Sargassum hemiphyllum can significantly reduce the infection of H. pylori without developing to drug resistance. Fucoidan appears to be a strong anti-inflammation agent as manifested by the RAW264.7 cell model examination. Fucoidan can prohibit H. pylori adhesion to host cells, thereby reducing the infection rate by 60%, especially in post treatment in the AGS cell model assay. Mechanistically, fucoidan intervenes the adhesion of BabA and AlpA of H. pylori significantly lowering the total count of H. pylori and the level of IL-6 and TNF-alpha in vivo. These results all converge on the same fact that fucoidan is an effective agent in a position to protect the stomach from the H. pylori infection by reducing both the total count and induced inflammation.

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