Kidney bean lectin-induced Escherichia coli overgrowth in the small intestine is blocked by GNA, a mannose-specific lectin |
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Authors: | A Pusztai G Grant RJ Spencer Tracey J Duguid DS Brown SWB Ewen WJ Peumans Els JM Van Damme Susan Bardocz |
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Institution: | Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeen;Department of Pathology, Medical School, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK;Laboratory for Phytopathology and Plant Protection, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Heverlee, Belgium |
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Abstract: | The reversible and dose-dependent hyperplastic growth of the small intestine and accelerated epithelial cell turnover caused by feeding rats with diets containing kidney bean lectin (PHA) increased the proportion of immature cells on the villi whose membrane and/or cytoplasm contained mainly simple, polymannosylated glycans. These new α-linked mannosyl terminals, particularly of the damaged epithelium, facilitated the preferential adherence of opportunistic Escherichia coli with mannose-sensitive Type 1 fimbriae, and other coliforms, to the glycocalyx. Accordingly, the growth of the gut was accompanied by a reversible and PHA dose-dependent overgrowth with E.coli. As expected from their common carbohydrate specificity, the inclusion in the diet of the mannose-specific agglutinin from snowdrop ( Galanthus nivalis ) bulbs (GNA) significantly reduced the extent of E.coli overgrowth, but abolished neither the growth nor the damage caused by PHA to the small intestine. Thus, GNA and perhaps other mannose-specific lectins, especially when used in a preventive mode, can be used to specifically block the proliferation of Type 1 E.coli in the small intestine. |
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