Research
Good Bacteria
Part 1
Probiotic effects of feeding heat-killed Lactobacillus
acidophilus and Lactobacillus casei to
Candida albicans-colonized immunodeficient
mice
Abstract
Wagner
RD, Pierson C, Warner T, Dohnalek M, Hilty M, Balish
E.
Department
of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of
Wisconsin Medical School, Madison 53706-1532, USA.
Probiotic
bacteria can protect immunodeficient mice from orogastric
candidiasis but cause some pathology of their own. Severely
immunodeficient patients may be at risk if fed viable
probiotics, so this study evaluated the probiotic potential
of nonviable probiotic bacteria to protect immunodeficient
mice from Candida albicans infections. Heat-killed
probiotic bacteria were fed to gnotobiotic bg/bg-nu/nu
and bg/bg-nu/+ mice to ascertain if they could protect
the mice from mucosal and systemic candidiasis. Both
heat-killed Lactobacillus acidophilus (HKLA)
and heat-killed Lactobacillus casei (HKLC),
in comparison to control mice not fed the probiotic
bacteria but challenged (oral) with C. albicans,
suppressed the severity of orogastric candidiasis in
bg/bg-nu/nu mice at 2 weeks after colonization with
C. albicans, inhibited disseminated candidiasis
in C. albicans-colonized bg/bg-nu/+ mice at
4 weeks after colonization, and suppressed the number
of viable C. albicans in the alimentary tract.
HKLA, but not HKLC, treatment inhibited disseminated
candidiasis in bg/bg-nu/nu mice at 2 weeks after oral
challenge and enhanced the proliferative responses of
splenocytes from C. albicans-colonized bg/bg-nu/+
mice to C. albicans antigens. Neither HKLA
nor HKLC were able to prolong the survival of gnotobiotic
bg/bg-nu/nu mice after oral challenge with C. albicans.
These results demonstrate that heat-killed lactobacilli
can induce some (limited) protection (probiotic effect)
against candidiasis in mice.