4.4 Article

Chronic ingestion of deoxynivalenol and fumonisin, alone or in interaction, induces morphological and immunological changes in the intestine of piglets

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 107, Issue 12, Pages 1776-1786

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0007114511004946

Keywords

Multi-contamination; Mycotoxins; Deoxynivalenol; Fumonisins; Intestine; Cellular junctions; Immunity

Funding

  1. Biomin company
  2. ANRT (Association Nationale de la Recherche Technique)
  3. INRA (Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique)
  4. CAPES/COFECUB [593/08]
  5. CNPq [472048/2008-2]
  6. BRAIN Program from Biomin company
  7. [CIFRE 065/2007]

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Deoxynivalenol (DON) and fumonisins (FB) are mycotoxins produced by Fusarium species, which naturally co-occur in animal diets. The gastrointestinal tract represents the first barrier met by exogenous food/feed compounds. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effects of DON and FB, alone and in combination, on some intestinal parameters, including morphology, histology, expression of cytokines and junction proteins. A total of twenty-four 5-week-old piglets were randomly assigned to four different groups, receiving separate diets for 5 weeks: a control diet; a diet contaminated with either DON (3 mg/kg) or FB (6 mg/kg); or both toxins. Chronic ingestion of these contaminated diets induced morphological and histological changes, as shown by the atrophy and fusion of villi, the decreased villi height and cell proliferation in the jejunum, and by the reduced number of goblet cells and lymphocytes. At the end of the experiment, the expression levels of several cytokines were measured by RT-PCR and some of them (TNF-alpha, IL-1 beta, IFN-gamma, 11-6 and IL-10) were significantly up-regulated in the ileum or the jejunum. In addition, the ingestion of contaminated diets reduced the expression of the adherent junction protein E-cadherin and the tight junction protein occludin in the intestine. When animals were fed with a co-contaminated diet (DON + FB), several types of interactions were observed depending on the parameters and segments assessed: synergistic (immune cells); additive (cytokines and junction protein expression); less than additive (histological lesions and cytokine expression); antagonistic (immune cells and cytokine expression). Taken together, the present data provide strong evidence that chronic ingestion of low doses of mycotoxins alters the intestine, and thus may predispose animals to infections by enteric pathogens.

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