The practitioner corpus is unanimous on this: you do not seed a garden on top of a broken wall. You fix the wall first. The biome reorganizes itself once the substrate it lives on is healed.
Why probiotics-first fails
Dropping live cultures onto an inflamed, hyperpermeable barrier doesn't produce colonization — it produces transit. The transient bacteria pass through, encounter the same dysbiotic terrain that drove the leak in the first place, and either get crowded out by entrenched pathogenic species or — worse — get translocated across the loose tight junctions, where the immune system reads them as foreign invaders and mounts an inflammatory response. You've just paid to feed the loop.
The corpus describes this directly. Practitioner observation: probiotic supplementation after broad-spectrum antibiotic disruption can prolong recovery rather than accelerate it, because the gut hasn't been given the substrate to rebuild its own species selection mechanism. Butyrate supplementation during and after antibiotic exposure, by contrast, fuels the colonocytes and lets the resident microbiome re-establish on its own terms. Same disruption, two interventions — the upstream substrate wins.
This is the upstream lever: a healed barrier selects for the right microbiome. You don't have to micromanage which strains colonize where. Restore enterocyte integrity, restore the mucin layer, restore tight junction function, and the gut's evolved selection mechanisms do the species curation for you. The wall does the gardener's job once the wall is intact.
The mechanism: why the wall comes first
Tight junctions are protein complexes — zonulin, occludin, claudins — that seal the spaces between enterocytes. When zonulin is elevated (chronically triggered by gluten, by LPS from dysbiotic species, by NSAIDs, by chronic stress) those junctions loosen and antigens cross paracellularly into the lamina propria. The immune system reacts. Cytokines rise. The cytokines further damage the junctions. The dysbiotic species that triggered the loop now have a permanent route to systemic circulation, and the feedback runs on autopilot.
You cannot interrupt this loop by adding more bacterial species to the mix. You interrupt it by restoring the seal. Once the seal is restored, antigen translocation drops, immune activation calms, cytokines fall, and the local environment becomes hospitable again to commensal species. Then you reseed — and the new species actually stick.
Enterocyte turnover is fast — the lining replaces itself every three to five days. If you supply the substrate (amino acids for cell building, zinc for tight junction protein expression, anti-inflammatories to break the NF-κB cytokine loop, and in Phase 1 the peptide layer to drive crypt proliferation), the wall rebuilds itself on a biological timeline measured in weeks, not months. The 10-week protocol structure isn't arbitrary — it's a multiple of enterocyte turnover plus immune system reset time.
What "barrier first" looks like as a sequence
The protocol runs Remove → Repair → Reinoculate → Rebalance in that order. The corpus is rigid on this ordering — every practitioner-aligned protocol that resolves leaky gut sustainably runs this sequence. The biome-rebuild step is the third move, not the first.
- Remove (Week 0, ongoing) — Strip the inputs driving the leak. Gluten, alcohol, NSAIDs, the foods your IgG panel flagged, industrial seed oils, processed sugar. This is the 10-day elimination frame the corpus references repeatedly. Without removal, every downstream substrate gets consumed putting out the same fires.
- Repair (Weeks 1-10) — Barrier substrates + healing peptides. This is the load-bearing phase. BPC-157 and TB-500 enter here in Phase 1 (next chapter). The barrier nutrients run as foundation underneath, continuously.
- Reinoculate (Week 7+) — Once the barrier is structurally healed, then reintroduce species. Targeted, not shotgun. Specific Bifido/Lacto strains where indicated, soil-based organisms, fermented foods reintroduced slowly. Substrate-favored line: Visbiome, E. coli Nissle, Bacillus Coagulans, fermented foods as the reseeding tools — not Week 1 ammunition.
- Rebalance (Maintenance) — Lifestyle substrate: prebiotic fiber diversity, polyphenols (olive oil, turmeric, pomegranate, cranberries, green tea — substrate-cited), sleep, stress regulation. The long game that holds the gains.
Foundation barrier substrates (run throughout the protocol)
These run alongside the peptide stack from Week 1 forward. The corpus names them consistently as the barrier-rebuild substrate, but cites specific doses inconsistently — the ranges below reflect the most commonly used practitioner formulations. Track and adjust to tolerance.
| Compound | Dose | Route | Frequency | Evidence Tier | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L-glutamine | [corpus thin on exact dose — practitioner ranges 5-15g/day in divided doses; track and report] | Oral, powder in water | Daily, away from meals | 🟢 Expert | Primary enterocyte fuel; substrate for tight junction protein turnover |
| Zinc carnosine | [corpus thin on exact dose — practitioner ranges 75-150 mg/day; track and report] | Oral | Twice daily with food | 🟢 Expert | Zinc + L-carnosine chelate; upregulates tight junction expression and mucin production |
| Curcumin (high-bioavailability) | [corpus thin on dose — track and report] | Oral | Daily with fat | 🟢 Expert | Breaks the NF-κB cytokine loop driving ongoing damage; corpus references it for both leak and dysbiosis |
| Bovine colostrum | [corpus thin on dose — track and report] | Oral, powder | Daily, morning, empty stomach | 🟢 Expert | Substrate-cited: raises salivary/mucosal IgA up to ~79% from baseline in athletes; restores secretory immunity |
| Collagen / bone broth | [corpus thin on dose — track and report] | Oral | Daily | 🟣 Experimental | Glycine + proline substrate for connective tissue and barrier; lower-leverage than the items above but stack-additive |
| Butyrate (sodium or tributyrin) | [corpus thin on dose — track and report] | Oral | Daily | 🟢 Expert | Direct colonocyte fuel; corpus explicitly favors this over probiotics during/after antibiotic disruption |
| L-arginine | [corpus thin — track and report] | Oral | Daily | 🟣 Experimental | Named in the substrate among barrier-support amino acids; thinner evidence base than glutamine but stack-compatible |
The peptide layer (BPC-157, TB-500, KPV) loads in Chapter 3 as Phase 1. These foundation substrates are the floor — they run continuously underneath, the peptides cycle on top.
What's NOT happening yet
- You're not reseeding the microbiome in Phase 1. Specifically not. Practitioner corpus is clear: probiotic reintroduction belongs Week 7+, after the wall is sealed. Running it earlier wastes the probiotic and irritates the barrier.
- Fermented foods aren't a free pass. Kefir, kombucha, sauerkraut on an inflamed barrier can flare the histamine load and worsen symptoms — they're a tool for the reinoculation phase, not the repair phase.
- Bone broth alone isn't the protocol. It's one substrate among the foundation stack. The wellness-blog version of "drink bone broth to fix your gut" is incomplete by an order of magnitude.
- You're not going to feel "fixed" from the foundation stack alone. The barrier substrates are necessary but not sufficient. The peptide layer is what moves enterocyte proliferation and mucin regeneration into a different gear. The foundation alone slows the leak; the foundation plus peptides closes it.
- Symptom relief is not a barrier-state readout. Some users feel dramatically better in Week 2 with zonulin still elevated. Others feel worse for 7-10 days as elimination and die-off resolve. Track the markers (Module 6), not the daily mood.
The corpus is unanimous on the sequence — wall first, garden second. Track your markers. Adjust the stack to your data.