4.7 Article

Potentials of orally supplemented selenium-enriched Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus to mitigate the lead induced liver and intestinal tract injury

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 302, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119062

Keywords

Selenium nanoparticles; Selenium-enriched Lactobacillus rhamnosus; Lead; Liver; Intestinal tract

Funding

  1. Innovation Capability Support Program of Shaanxi, China [2020TD-042]
  2. Key Research and Develop-ment Plan of Shaanxi Province, China [2017ZDXL-NY-0304, 2019ZDLNY01-02-02]

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In this study, selenium-enriched Lactobacillus rhamnosus was developed and found to efficiently protect the liver and intestinal tract from lead-induced injury.
Lead is a metal that exists naturally in the Earth's crust and is a ubiquitous environmental contaminant. The alleviation of lead toxicity is important to keep human health under lead exposure. Biosynthesized selenium nanoparticle (SeNPs) and selenium-enriched Lactobacillus rhamnosus SHA113 (Se-LRS) were developed in this study, and their potentials in alleviating lead-induced injury to the liver and intestinal tract were evaluated in mice by oral administration for 4 weeks. As results, oral intake of lead acetate (150 mg/kg body weight per day) caused more than 50 times and 100 times lead accumulation in blood and the liver, respectively. Liver function was seriously damaged by the lead exposure, which is indicated as the significantly increased lipid accumulation in the liver, enhanced markers of liver function injury in serum, and occurrence of oxidative stress in liver tissues. Serious injury in intestinal tract was also found under lead exposure, as shown by the decrease of intestinal microbiota diversity and occurrence of oxidative stress. Except the lead content in blood and the liver were lowered by 52% and 58%, respectively, oral administration of Se-LRS protected all the other lead-induced injury markers to the normal level. By the comparison with the effects of normal L. rhamnosus SHA113 and the SeNPs isolated from Se-LRS, high protective effects of Se-LRS can be explained as the extremely high efficiency to promote lead excretion via feces by forming insoluble mixture. These findings illustrate the developed seleniumenriched L. rhamnosus can efficiently protect the liver and intestinal tract from injury by lead.

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