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Cranberry Polyphenols and Prevention against Urinary Tract Infections: New Findings Related to the Integrity and Functionality of Intestinal and Urinary Barriers

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Authors
de Llano, Dolores Gonzalez; Roldan, Mikel; Taladrid, Diego; de la Guia, Edgard Relano; Moreno-Arribas, M. Victoria; Bartolome, Begona
Journal
JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY 10.1021/acs.jafc.3c07169
Abstract

This work seeks to generate new knowledge about the mechanisms underlying the protective effects of cranberry against urinary tract infections (UTI). Using Caco-2 cells grown in Transwell inserts as an intestinal barrier model, we found that a cranberry-derived digestive fluid (containing 135 +/- 5 mg of phenolic compounds/L) increased transepithelial electrical resistance with respect to control (Delta TEER = 54.5 Omega cm2) and decreased FITC-dextran paracellular transport by about 30%, which was related to the upregulation of the gene expression of tight junction (TJ) proteins (i.e., occludin, zonula occludens-1 [ZO-1], and claudin-2) (similar to 3-4-fold change with respect to control for claudin-2 and similar to 2-3-fold for occludin and ZO-1). Similar protective effects, albeit to a lesser extent, were observed when Caco-2 cells were previously infected with uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC). In a urinary barrier model comprising T24 cells grown in Transwell inserts and either noninfected or UPEC-infected, treatments with the cranberry-derived phenolic metabolites 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) and phenylacetic acid (PAA) (250 mu M) also promoted favorable changes in barrier integrity and permeability. In this line, incubation of noninfected T24 cells with these metabolites induced positive regulatory effects on claudin-2 and ZO-1 expression (similar to 3.5- and similar to 2-fold change with respect to control for DOPAC and similar to 1.5- and >2-fold change with respect to control for PAA, respectively). Overall, these results suggest that the protective action of cranberry polyphenols against UTI might involve molecular mechanisms related to the integrity and functionality of the urothelium and intestinal epithelium.