Effects of addition of kaolin or cellulose to an elemental diet on intestinal cell proliferation in the mouse
- 1 July 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 50 (1) , 91-98
- https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19830075
Abstract
1. Various methods of estimating intestinal mass and cell proliferation were used to compare the effects of a pelleted laboratory diet (diet A), an elemental diet (Flexical; diet B), Flexical plus kaolin (diet C) and Flexical plus cellulose (diet D) on the mucosa and other tissues of the mouse small intestine and colon.2. The weight of the distal third of the small intestine was significantly decreased in mice given diets B, C and D (P< 0·001). The length of the colon was significantly decreased in the mice given diets B (P< 0·001), C (P< 0·01) and D (P< 0·05); however, the weight of the colon was only decreased in the mice given diet B or diet C (P< 0·001).Similar changes were noted in the weights of the intestinal muscle and serosa layers; however, no such changes were noted in the weight or DNA content of the mucosa.3. No changes were observed in the crypt cell production rate in the small intestine, apart from an increase in the mid-region (P< 0·01) of mice given diet C, which was associated with a similar increase in the mucosal content of DNA.Crypt-cell production was significantly decreased (P< 0·01, 0·001) in the two sites of the colon studied in the mice given diets B or C, but the crypt-cell production rates were not significantly different from control levels at either site in the mice given diet D.4. The length of the colonic crypts was significantly decreased (P< 0·05, 0·02) in mice given diets B and C, but not in those given diet D; total cell number showed a similar change (P< 0·01, 0·05).The correlation coefficient between the length of the colonic crypts and absolute cell number was 0·513.5. The conclusion of the present study was that dietary fibre (cellulose), but not inert bulk (kaolin), prevents mucosal atrophy of the colon of mice given a fibre-free diet, and that many of the observed changes in intestinal weight are due to reduction in the bulk of the muscle layer.This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fermentation of dietary fibre components in the rat intestinal tractBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1982
- Effect of Diverting Bile and Pancreatic Secretions into the Ileum on Small Bowel Mucosa in Rats Fed a Liquid Formula DietJournal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 1982
- Elemental Diet Composition and the Structure and Function of Rat Small Intestine: Comparison of the Effects of Two Diets on Morphology and in Vivo Absorption of WaterJournal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 1981
- Effects of Dietary Wheat Bran on Rat Colonic Structure and Mucosal Cell GrowthJournal of Nutrition, 1981
- Stimulatory effect of insulin on ruminal epithelium cell mitosis in adult sheepBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1980
- Small intestinal and colonic changes induced by a chemically defined dietDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1980
- Gastrointestinal responses to graded levels of cellulose feeding in conventional and germ-free mice.Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology, 1980
- Colonic mucosal atrophy induced by a liquid elemental diet in ratsDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1977
- A new fluorometric method for RNA and DNA determinationAnalytical Biochemistry, 1966
- Cell Population Studies on the Intestine of Continuously Irradiated RatsRadiation Research, 1963