TY - JOUR
T1 - What is the leaky gut? Clinical considerations in humans
AU - Camilleri, Michael
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/9/1
Y1 - 2021/9/1
N2 - Purpose of reviewTo review the components of the intestinal barrier, the practical measurements of intestinal permeability, and the clinical conditions associated with altered intestinal barrier function, and to summarize the effects of dietary substances that fortify or weaken the intestinal barrier.Recent findingsThe intestinal barrier includes surface mucus, epithelial layer, and immune defense mechanisms. Transport across the epithelium may result from increased paracellular transport, apoptosis, or transcellular permeability. Assessment of the intestinal barrier requires measurements beyond the transport across the epithelial layer or the measurement of tight junction expression. Barrier function is most meaningfully tested in vivo using orally administered probe molecules; other approaches are performed in vitro using mucosal biopsies from humans, or exposing colonic mucosa from rats or mice or cell layers to extracts of colonic mucosa or stool from patients. Dietary factors can influence intestinal leakiness: fortifying the barrier with vitamins A and D, zinc, short-chain fatty acids, methionine, glutamine, and probiotics; weakening of the barrier has been reported with fat, bile acids, emulsifiers, and gliadin. Intestinal mucosal leakiness in 'stress' disorders such as major burns is reversed with enteral glutamine.SummaryInflammatory or ulcerating intestinal diseases result in leakiness of the gut barrier; however, no such disease has been cured by simply normalizing intestinal barrier function. Similarly, it is still unproven that restoring barrier function (reversing 'leaky gut') can ameliorate clinical manifestations in nonulcerating gastrointestinal disease or systemic or neurological diseases. On the other hand, dietary and enteral interventions can fortify the intestinal barrier in stress-associated states.
AB - Purpose of reviewTo review the components of the intestinal barrier, the practical measurements of intestinal permeability, and the clinical conditions associated with altered intestinal barrier function, and to summarize the effects of dietary substances that fortify or weaken the intestinal barrier.Recent findingsThe intestinal barrier includes surface mucus, epithelial layer, and immune defense mechanisms. Transport across the epithelium may result from increased paracellular transport, apoptosis, or transcellular permeability. Assessment of the intestinal barrier requires measurements beyond the transport across the epithelial layer or the measurement of tight junction expression. Barrier function is most meaningfully tested in vivo using orally administered probe molecules; other approaches are performed in vitro using mucosal biopsies from humans, or exposing colonic mucosa from rats or mice or cell layers to extracts of colonic mucosa or stool from patients. Dietary factors can influence intestinal leakiness: fortifying the barrier with vitamins A and D, zinc, short-chain fatty acids, methionine, glutamine, and probiotics; weakening of the barrier has been reported with fat, bile acids, emulsifiers, and gliadin. Intestinal mucosal leakiness in 'stress' disorders such as major burns is reversed with enteral glutamine.SummaryInflammatory or ulcerating intestinal diseases result in leakiness of the gut barrier; however, no such disease has been cured by simply normalizing intestinal barrier function. Similarly, it is still unproven that restoring barrier function (reversing 'leaky gut') can ameliorate clinical manifestations in nonulcerating gastrointestinal disease or systemic or neurological diseases. On the other hand, dietary and enteral interventions can fortify the intestinal barrier in stress-associated states.
KW - barrier
KW - diet
KW - leak
KW - mucus
KW - permeability
KW - pore
KW - tight junctions
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U2 - 10.1097/MCO.0000000000000778
DO - 10.1097/MCO.0000000000000778
M3 - Review article
C2 - 34138767
AN - SCOPUS:85114384062
SN - 1363-1950
VL - 24
SP - 473
EP - 482
JO - Current opinion in clinical nutrition and metabolic care
JF - Current opinion in clinical nutrition and metabolic care
IS - 5
ER -