Effect of Daikenchuto On Spontaneous Intestinal Tumors in Apc Min/+ Mice

Daikenchuto (TU-100) is herbal medicine which predominantly contains ginger, Japanese pepper, and ginseng. We investigated whether TU-100 can affect the composition of gut flora and intestinal tumor development using Apc mice, a murine model of intestinal tumor. Bacterial 16S rRNA sequencing and sho...

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Veröffentlicht in:Kobe journal of the medical sciences 2021-01, Vol.66 (4), p.E139
Hauptverfasser: Kong, Lingling, Hoshi, Namiko, Watanabe, Daisuke, Yamada, Yasutaka, Yasutomi, Eiichiro, Adachi, Soichiro, Ooi, Makoto, Sui, Yunlong, Yoshida, Ryutaro, Sekimoto, Ryohei, Tokunaga, Eri, Miyazaki, Haruka, Ku, Yuna, Takenaka, Haruka, Kunihiro, Tadao, Inoue, Jun, Tian, Zibin, Kodama, Yuzo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Daikenchuto (TU-100) is herbal medicine which predominantly contains ginger, Japanese pepper, and ginseng. We investigated whether TU-100 can affect the composition of gut flora and intestinal tumor development using Apc mice, a murine model of intestinal tumor. Bacterial 16S rRNA sequencing and short-chain fatty acid analysis were performed on faecal samples. Tumor number and size were analysed. Any change in gene expression of the tumor tissues was assessed by real-time PCR. Principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) showed that the faecal microbiota cluster of TU-100-fed mice was different from the microbiota of control mice. However, no significant difference was observed in the concentration of short-chain fatty acids, tumor number, and gene expression levels between the two groups. Our data showed that TU-100 can affect the intestinal environment; however, it does not contribute in tumor progression or inhibition in our setting.
ISSN:1883-0498