Phyllanthus emblica
Polysaccharide Ameliorates Ulcerative Colitis via Gut
Microbiota Regulation
Ning Wang1,#,
Junda Wu 1, #, Yanyun Che 2, #,
Junkang Liu 1, Qinhong Yang 1, Ying Zhang
5, Wengui Li 1, Xiaonan Yang 3, Yi Wu
1, Fanan Suksawat 4, *,
Zhongbin Bai1,
*
and
Xin Wu1, *
1College
of Veterinary Medicine,
Yunnan Agricultural University,
Kunming 650201, China;
2Engineering
Laboratory for National Healthcare Theories and Products of Yunnan
Province, College of Pharmaceutical Science, Yunnan University of
Chinese Medicine, Kunming 650500, China;
3National
Engineering Research Center for Southwest Endangered Medicinal
Resources Development, Guangxi Key Laboratory of High-Quality
Formation and Utilization of Dao-di Herbs, Guangxi Botanical Garden
of Medicinal Plants, Nanning 530023, China;
4Faculty
of Veterinary Medicine, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen 40002,
Thailand;
5College
of Veterinary Medicine, China Agricultural University, Beijing
100193, China. #These authors contributed equally to this
work.
Ulcerative colitis is
one of the classical
chronic inflammatory bowel diseases, has complex etiology involving immune
dysfunction and gut microbiota dysbiosis.
Traditional medicine polysaccharides have shown promising potential to alleviate
intestinal inflammation associated with UC. However, there is still insufficient
reporting on how the polysaccharides from Phyllanthus emblica can exert
therapeutic and repairing effects by regulating gut microbiota.
So,
the current study was conducted to assess the therapeutic potential of
Phyllanthusemblica fruit polysaccharide
(PEP)
on UC and its influence on the gut microbiota and metabolite profiles in a
DSS-induced
mice
UC model.
This study assessed the clinical, histopathological, inflammatory/oxidative
stress indices, and analyzed gut microbiota by 16S rRNA sequencing and fecal
metabolites by untargeted metabolomics in four mouse groups with oral PEP
treatment in DSS-induced UC model. PEP
treatment significantly alleviated clinical severity,
evidenced by decreased level of disease
activity index,
restoring the length of colon,
and improvement in histopathology.
It
strengthened
intestinal barrier
wholeness
by upregulating tight junction proteins (ZO-1,
Occludin)
and suppressed colonic pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α,
IL-1β,
IL-6),
Myeloperoxidase
and malondialdehyde.
In addition,
multi-omics analysis revealed that
PEP
alleviated UC by remodeling the gut microbiota and its metabolic function.
PEP
selectively enriched beneficial commensals such as Bacteroides
acidifaciens and Paraprevotella clara,
and
increasing the SCFA-producing, rhamnose, histidine metabolism, and peptidoglycan.
PEP
selectively enriched beneficial commensals such as
Bacteroides acidifaciens,
and Paraprevotella clara.
Then, that
supported the ecological stability of the consortium,
which subsequently increased the production of
SCFA, rhamnose, histidine metabolism, and peptidoglycan,
contributing to the alleviation of intestinal inflammation.
In summary,
PEP
alleviates UC by first strengthening the intestinal colonization of
core
beneficial bacteria,
which in turn produce metabolites that directly repair the epithelial barrier
and resolve inflammation.
To Cite This Article:
Wang
N,
Wu J, Che Y,
Liu J, Yang Q, Zhang Y, Li W, Yang X, Wu Y, Suksawat F,
Bai
Z
and
Wu X,
2026. Phyllanthus emblica polysaccharide ameliorates ulcerative colitis
via gut microbiota regulation. Pak Vet J, 46(3): 617-627. http://dx.doi.org/10.29261/pakvetj/2026.050