4.6 Article

Dietary quercetin ameliorates experimental colitis in mouse by remodeling the function of colonic macrophages via a heme oxygenase-1-dependent pathway

Journal

CELL CYCLE
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 53-63

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15384101.2017.1387701

Keywords

Inflammatory bowel disease; colitis; Quercetin; macrophage; immunological hemostasis; enteric commensal flora; HO-1

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81373149, 31370887]
  2. Nature Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20151195]
  3. Nature Science Foundation of Suzhou City [SYS201363]
  4. Fund for Digestive Diseases and Nutrition Research Key Laboratory of Suzhou [SZS201620]
  5. Fund of 333 Project of Jiangsu Province [BRA2015106]
  6. Fund of Medical Youth Talent project of Jiangsu Province [QNRC2016241]
  7. Nanjing Medical Science and Technique Development Foundation [QRX17205]

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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) results from a chronic intestinal inflammation and tissue destruction via an aberrant immune-driven inflammatory response towards an altered gut microbiota. Dietary intervention is becoming an attractive avenue for the therapy of colitis because diet is a key determinant of the mucosal immune response. Quercetin (QCN) is the most common in nature and the major representative of dietary antioxidant flavonoids, which has been demonstrated to influence the progression of colitis. However, the underlying mechanism of QCN on intestinal immunomodulation remains unclear. Here, our study demonstrated dietary QCN could ameliorate experimental colitis in part by modulating the anti-inflammatory effects and bactericidal capacity of macrophages via Heme oxygenase-1 (Hmox1, HO-1) dependent pathway. It suggested that QCN might restore the proper intestinal host-microbe relationship to ameliorate the colitis via rebalancing the pro-inflammatory, anti-inflammatory and bactericidal function of enteric macrophages. Hence, modulating the function of intestinal macrophages with dietary administration of QCN to restore the immunological hemostasis and rebalance the enteric commensal flora is a potential and promising strategy for IBD therapy.

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