Multi-Strain Probiotic and Bee Pollen Supplementation Attenuates CCl4-Induced Altered Intestinal Tight Junctions in Rodents
Nada Alsayari, Ramesa Shafi Bhat, Seema Zargar, Abeer M. Aldbass, Sooad Al-Daihan

TL;DR
This study shows that probiotics help repair gut barrier damage caused by carbon tetrachloride in rats more effectively than prebiotics.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel comparison of probiotics and prebiotics in mitigating CCl4-induced gut barrier dysfunction in rodents.
Findings
Probiotics were more effective than prebiotics in normalizing Zonulin and Occludin levels after CCl4 exposure.
Probiotics restored gut microbial balance and reduced pathogen overgrowth in CCl4-treated rats.
CCl4 caused significant histopathological changes in the intestinal tissue of rodents.
Abstract
Environmental toxins can impair gut microbiota and increase intestinal permeability, contributing to various health problems. While many such toxins are known to disrupt tight junctions and compromise barrier function, research specifically examining carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) as a trigger of intestinal epithelial barrier dysfunction remains limited. In this study, 54 young Western albino male rats, weighing 180–200 g, were randomly assigned to nine experimental groups, each comprising six rats. Group 1 received 1 mL of oral saline and served as a control. Groups 2 and 3 received 0.2 g/kg body weight probiotic and prebiotic, respectively, for four weeks. CCl4 (1 mL/kg, i.p.) was administered either at the beginning of day 1 (damage induction; Group 4) or at the end of day 28 (protection assessment; Group 7). Intervention groups received probiotics and prebiotics for 4 weeks after…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBarrier Structure and Function Studies · Gut microbiota and health · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research
