Anti-inflammatory properties of a pomegranate extract and its metabolite urolithin-A in a colitis rat model and the effect of colon inflammation on phenolic metabolism☆
Received 24 February 2009; received in revised form 18 April 2009; accepted 23 April 2009. published online 21 July 2009.
Abstract
Whether the beneficial effects of pomegranate are due to the ellagitannins or to their microbiota-derived urolithins is not known. Our objectives were to evaluate the effects of pomegranate intake and its main microbiota-derived metabolite urolithin-A (UROA) on colon inflammation and to assess whether UROA is the main anti-inflammatory compound. In addition, the effect of the inflammation on the phenolic metabolism was also explored. Male Fisher rats were fed with 250 mg kg−1 day−1 pomegranate extract (PE) or 15 mg kg−1 day−1 UROA for 25 days. Dextran sodium sulfate (5%) (DSS) was administered for the five last days and then rats were euthanized. DSS is a well-known model of inflammatory bowel disease. Colon tissue damage, microbiota changes, antioxidant status, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), nitric oxide production, inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), prostaglandin E synthase (PTGES), gene expression (microarrays and RT-PCR) and polyphenol metabolism (LC-MS-MS) were evaluated. Both PE and UROA decreased inflammation markers (iNOS, cycloxygenase-2, PTGES and PGE2 in colonic mucosa) and modulated favorably the gut microbiota. The G1 to S cell cycle pathway was up-regulated in both groups. UROA group showed various down-regulated pathways, including that of the inflammatory response. PE, but not UROA, decreased oxidative stress in plasma and colon mucosa. Only UROA preserved colonic architecture. The normal formation of urolithins in PE-fed rats was prevented during inflammation. Our results suggest that UROA could be the most active anti-inflammatory compound derived from pomegranate ingestion in healthy subjects, whereas in colon inflammation, the effects could be due to the nonmetabolized ellagitannin-related fraction.
aDepartment of Preclinical and Clinical Pharmacology, University of Florence, I-50139 Florence, Italy
bResearch Group on Quality, Safety and Bioactivity of Plant Foods, Department of Food Science and Technology, CEBAS-CSIC, 30100 Campus de Espinardo, Murcia, Spain
Corresponding author. Department of Food Science and Technology, CEBAS-CSIC, 30100 Campus de Espinardo, Murcia, Spain. Tel.: +34 968 396344; fax: +34 968 396213.
☆ This work has been supported by the Projects CICYT-BFU2007-60576 and Consolider Ingenio 2010, CSD2007-00063 (Fun-C-Food). M.L. is holder of a postdoctoral grant from MCINN (Spain), M.V.S. is the holder of a I3P-postdoctoral grant from CSIC (Spain), A.G.S. is holder of a FPI predoctoral grant from MICINN and M.A.O. is the holder of a JAE-predoctoral grant from CSIC.