Lactic acid bacteria alleviate liver damage caused by perfluorooctanoic acid exposure via antioxidant capacity, biosorption capacity and gut microbiota regulation

By Liuting Shi, Ruili Pan, Guopeng Lin, Xi Liang, Jianxin Zhao, Hao Zhang, Wei Chen, and Gang Wang
Ecotoxicol Environ Saf
July 27, 2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2021.112515

Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) is an environmental pollutant that has multiple toxic effects. Although some medicines and functional food ingredients are currently being used to alleviate the biological toxicity effects caused by PFOA, these candidates all show potential side effects and cannot prevent the accumulation of PFOA in the body, making them unable to be used as a daily dietary supplement to relieve the toxic effects of PFOA. However, new research has shown that lactic acid bacteria (LAB) can alleviate toxicity caused by exposure to foreign substances. In this study, multiple strains of LAB with different adsorption capacities or antioxidant capacities were used to analyse their mitigation effects of on liver damage caused by PFOA exposure. The results showed that the adsorption capacity and antioxidant capacity of LAB could alleviate the liver toxicity of PFOA to a certain extent. Moreover, treatment with some strains of LAB was able to recover the gut microbiota dysbiosis caused by PFOA exposure, such as by increasing the relative abundances of Patescibacteria, Proteobacteria, Akkermansia and Alistipes or decreasing the abundances of Bacteroides and Blautia. In addition, a strain with neither outstanding antioxidant capacity nor adsorption capacity also reversed the decline in short-chain fatty acid levels caused by PFOA exposure. The ability of these strains to relieve gut microbiota dysbiosis partly explains the inconsistency between the capacity for antioxidant or PFOA adsorption and the ability of the strains to alleviate PFOA toxicity. The results indicate that the PFOA adsorption capacity and antioxidant capacity of LAB may be involved in the alleviation of PFOA liver toxicity. In addition, LAB could also alleviate liver damage caused by PFOA by adjusting the gut microbiota and short-chain fatty acid content. Therefore, some strains of LAB can be used as a potentially safe dietary supplement to relieve PFOA-induced liver damage.

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