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Reishi might reduce the risk of intestinal infection

March 25, 2018/Hokkaido University & Hokkaido Pharmaceutical University/Journal of Ethnopharmacology

Text/ Hong Yurou, Wu Tingyao

IgA antibody and defensin are the first line of immune defense against external microbial infections in the intestines. According to a study published by Hokkaido University and Hokkaido Pharmaceutical University in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology in December 2017, Ganoderma lucidum can promote the secretion of IgA antibodies and increase defensins without causing inflammation. It is obviously a good helper for improving intestinal immunity and reducing intestinal infections.

When pathogenic bacteria invade, Ganoderma lucidum will increase the secretion of IgA antibodies.

The small intestine is not only the digestive organ but also the immune organ. In addition to digesting and absorbing nutrients in food, it also defends against various pathogenic microorganisms that come in from the mouth.

Therefore, in addition to the countless villi (absorbing nutrients) on the inner lining of the intestinal wall, there are also lymphatic tissue called “Peyer’s patches (PP)” in small intestine, which serve as immune goalkeepers. Once pathogenic bacteria are discovered by macrophages or dendritic cells in Peyer’s patches, it will not take long for B cells to secrete IgA antibodies to capture pathogenic bacteria and build the first firewall for the intestinal tract.

Studies have confirmed that the greater the secretion of IgA antibodies, the more difficult it is for pathogenic bacteria to reproduce, the weaker the mobility of pathogenic bacteria, the harder it is for pathogenic bacteria to pass through the intestine and enter the bloodstream. The importance of IgA antibodies can be seen from this.

In order to understand the effect of Ganoderma lucidum on IgA antibodies secreted by Peyer’s patches in the wall of the small intestine, researchers from Hokkaido University in Japan took out Peyer’s patches in the wall of the small intestines of rats and then separated the cells in the patches and cultured them with the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Escherichia coli for 72 hours. It was found that if a considerable amount of Ganoderma lucidum was given during this period, the secretion of IgA antibodies would be much higher than that without Ganoderma lucidum – but low-dose Ganoderma lucidum had no such effect.

However, under the same conditions of time, if only the Peyer’s patches cells are cultured with Ganoderma lucidum without the stimulation of LPS, the secretion of IgA antibodies will not be particularly increased (as shown in the figure below). Obviously, when the intestine is facing the threat of external infection, Ganoderma lucidum can increase the defense level of the intestine by promoting the secretion of IgA, and this effect is proportional to the dose of Ganoderma lucidum.

The effect of Ganoderma lucidum on the secretion of antibodies by lymph nodes of the small intestine (Peyer’s patches)

[Note] The “-” at the bottom of the chart means “not included”, and “+” means “included”. LPS comes from Escherichia coli, and the concentration used in the experiment is 100μg/mL; Ganoderma lucidum used in the experiment is a suspension made of ground dry Reishi mushroom fruiting body powder and physiological saline, and the experimental doses are 0.5, 1, and 5 mg/kg, respectively. (Source/J Ethnopharmacol. 2017 Dec 14;214:240-243.) 

Ganoderma lucidum usually also improves expression levels of defensins

Another important role in the forefront of intestinal immunity is the “defensin”, which is a protein molecule secreted by the Paneth cells in the small intestine epithelium. Merely a small amount of defensin can inhibit or kill bacteria, fungi and certain types of viruses.

Paneth cells are mainly concentrated in the ileum (the second half of the small intestine). According to the animal experiment of the study, in the absence of LPS stimulation, rats were administered intragastrically Ganoderma lucidum (at the dose of 0.5, 1, 5 mg per kg body weight) for 24 hours, the gene expression levels of defensin-5 and defensin-6 in the ileum will increase with the increase of the Ganoderma lucidum dose, and are higher than the expression levels when stimulated by LPS (as shown in the figure below).

Obviously, even in peaceful times when there is no threat of pathogenic bacteria, Ganoderma lucidum will keep the defensins in the intestines in a state of combat readiness to respond to emergencies at any time.

The gene expression levels of defensins measured in the rat ileum (the final and longest segment of the small intestine)

Ganoderma lucidum does not cause excessive inflammation

In order to clarify the mechanism by which Ganoderma lucidum activates immunity, the researchers focused on the performance of TLR4. TLR4 is a receptor on immune cells that can identify foreign invaders (such as LPS), activate the message-transmitting molecules in immune cells, and make immune cells respond.

The experiment found that whether Ganoderma lucidum promotes the secretion of IgA antibodies or increases the gene expression levels of defensins is closely related to the activation of TLR4 receptors – TLR4 receptors are the key for Ganoderma lucidum to enhance intestinal immunity.

Although activating TLR4 can improve immunity, over-activation of TLR4 will cause immune cells to continuously secrete TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor), causing excessive inflammation and posing a health threat. Therefore, the researchers also tested TNF-α levels in the small intestine of rats.

It was found that TNF-α expression and secretion levels in the anterior and posterior segments of the small intestine (jejunum and ileum) and in the Peyer’s patches on the intestinal wall of rats were not particularly increased when Ganoderma lucidum was administered (as shown in the figure below), and high doses of Ganoderma lucidum could even inhibit TNF-α. 

The Ganoderma lucidum materials used in the above experiments are all prepared by grinding dried Ganoderma lucidum fruiting bodies into fine powder and adding physiological saline. The researchers said that because the Ganoderma lucidum used in the experiment contains ganoderic acid A, and past studies have shown that ganoderic acid A can inhibit inflammation, they speculate that in the process of enhancing intestinal immunity by Ganoderma lucidum polysaccharides, ganoderic acid A may well have played a balancing role at the right time.

TNF-α gene expression measured in various parts of the small intestine of rats

[Source] Kubota A, et al. Reishi mushroom Ganoderma lucidum modulates IgA production and alpha-defensin expression in the rat small intestine. J Ethnopharmacol. 2018 Mar 25;214:240-243.

END

About the author/ Ms. Wu Tingyao

Wu Tingyao has been reporting on first-hand Ganoderma information since 1999. She is the author of Healing with Ganoderma (published in The People’s Medical Publishing House in April 2017).

★ This article is published under the exclusive authorization of the author. 
★ The above works cannot be reproduced, excerpted or used in other ways without the authorization of the author. 
★ For violations of the above statement, the author will pursue relevant legal responsibilities. 
★ The original text of this article was written in Chinese by Wu Tingyao and translated into English by Alfred Liu. If there is any discrepancy between the translation (English) and the original (Chinese), the original Chinese shall prevail. If readers have any questions, please contact the original author, Ms. Wu Tingyao.

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