Establishment of a chronic biliary disease mouse model with cholecystoduodenal anastomosis for intestinal microbiome preservation.

IF 4.3 3区 医学 Q1 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY World Journal of Gastroenterology Pub Date : 2024-12-14 DOI:10.3748/wjg.v30.i46.4937
Yunseon Jang, Jung Yeon Kim, Song Yeon Han, Arum Park, So Jeong Baek, Gyurim Lee, Jihee Kang, Hyewon Ryu, Seok-Hwan Kim
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Abstract

Background: Chronic biliary disease, including cholangitis and cholecystitis, is attributed to ascending infection by intestinal bacteria. Development of a mouse model for bile duct inflammation is imperative for the advancement of novel therapeutic approaches. Current models fail to replicate the harmful bacterial influx to the biliary tract observed in humans and spread of inflammation to the liver. Therefore, we aimed to establish an animal model of biliary disease that faithfully replicates the mechanisms of human diseases.

Aim: To establish a cholecystoduodenal anastomosis model capable of mimicking the mechanisms of ascending infection and inflammation observed in human biliary diseases.

Methods: We established a mouse biliary disease model by directly connecting the gallbladder and duodenum, enabling ascending infection into the biliary tract without traversing the sphincter of Oddi.

Results: In the cholecystoduodenal anastomosis mouse model, we observed impaired epithelial structure, wall thickening, and macrophage recruitment in the gallbladder. Despite the absence of postoperative antibiotics, we detected no changes in serum proinflammatory cytokine levels, indicating no systemic inflammation. Moreover, patency between the gallbladder and duodenum was confirmed via common bile duct ligation. Injection of patient-derived pathogenic bacteria into bile duct-ligated mice led to ascending infection, which significantly increased proinflammatory cytokine mRNA expression in the liver, duodenum, and ileum. These results indicate that our mouse model exhibited a direct connection between the gallbladder and duodenum, leading to ascending infection and closely mimicking the clinical features of biliary diseases observed in humans.

Conclusion: The cholecystoduodenal anastomosis mouse model is an effective chronic biliary disease model with significant relevance in the development of microbiome-based therapies for the prevention and treatment of biliary disease.

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慢性胆道疾病小鼠胆囊-十二指肠吻合模型的建立及肠道微生物保存。
背景:慢性胆道疾病,包括胆管炎和胆囊炎,可归因于肠道细菌的上行感染。胆管炎症小鼠模型的建立对于新的治疗方法的发展至关重要。目前的模型无法复制在人类中观察到的有害细菌涌入胆道和炎症扩散到肝脏的情况。因此,我们的目标是建立一种忠实地复制人类疾病机制的胆道疾病动物模型。目的:建立能模拟人类胆道疾病上行感染和炎症机制的胆囊十二指肠吻合模型。方法:建立小鼠胆道疾病模型,直接连接胆囊和十二指肠,使感染不经Oddi括约肌上升进入胆道。结果:在胆囊-十二指肠吻合小鼠模型中,我们观察到胆囊上皮结构受损,壁增厚,巨噬细胞募集。尽管术后没有使用抗生素,我们检测到血清促炎细胞因子水平没有变化,表明没有全身性炎症。此外,通过胆总管结扎证实胆囊和十二指肠之间通畅。将患者源性致病菌注射到结扎胆管的小鼠体内,导致感染上升,显著增加肝脏、十二指肠和回肠中促炎细胞因子mRNA的表达。这些结果表明,我们的小鼠模型表现出胆囊和十二指肠之间的直接联系,导致上升感染,并非常接近人类观察到的胆道疾病的临床特征。结论:胆囊十二指肠吻合小鼠模型是一种有效的慢性胆道疾病模型,对开发基于微生物组的胆道疾病预防和治疗方法具有重要意义。
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来源期刊
World Journal of Gastroenterology
World Journal of Gastroenterology 医学-胃肠肝病学
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.70%
发文量
464
审稿时长
2.4 months
期刊介绍: The primary aims of the WJG are to improve diagnostic, therapeutic and preventive modalities and the skills of clinicians and to guide clinical practice in gastroenterology and hepatology.
期刊最新文献
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