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Sialic acid feeding aged rats rejuvenates stimulated salivation and colon enteric neuron chemotypes
Author(s) -
Norbert Sprenger,
Monique Julita,
Dominique Donnicola,
Alfred Jann
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
glycobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.757
H-Index - 128
eISSN - 1460-2423
pISSN - 0959-6658
DOI - 10.1093/glycob/cwp124
Subject(s) - sialic acid , ganglioside , n acetylneuraminic acid , endocrinology , medicine , receptor , motility , biology , enteric nervous system , biochemistry , microbiology and biotechnology
Old age is linked to numerous changes of body functions such as salivation, gastrointestinal motility, and permeability all linked to central and enteric nervous system decline. Thus, gut motility and barrier functions suffer. Sialic acid plays a key role in the nervous system at large and for many receptor functions specifically. Decreased sialylation in the elderly suggests an endogenous sialic acid deficit. We used a rat model of aging, to ask whether sialic acid feeding would affect (i) stimulated salivation, (ii) gut functions, and (iii) sialic acid levels and neuronal markers in brain and gut. We observed reduced levels of pilocarpine-stimulated salivation in old versus young rats and restored this function by sialic acid feeding. Brain ganglioside bound sialic acid levels were found lower in aged versus young rats, and sialic acid feeding partly restored the levels. The hypothalamic expression of cholinergic and panneuronal markers was reduced in aged rats. The expression of the nitrergic marker nNOS was increased upon sialic acid feeding in aged rats. Neither fecal output nor gut permeability was different between young and aged rats studied here, and sialic acid feeding did not alter these parameters. However, the colonic expression of specific nervous system markers nNOS and Uchl1 and the key enzyme for sialic acid synthesis GNE were differentially affected in young and aged rats by sialic acid feeding indicating that regulatory mechanisms change with age. Investigation of sialic acid supplementation as a functional nutrient in the elderly may help those who suffer from disorders of reduced salivation. Further research is needed to understand the differential effects of sialic acid feeding in young and aged rats.

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