Engineering recombinant Lactococcus lactis as a delivery vehicle for BPC-157 peptide with antioxidant activities.
Škrlec. Katja K; Ručman. Rudolf R; Jarc. Eva E; Sikirić. Predrag P; Švajger. Urban U; Petan. Toni T; Perišić Nanut. Milica M; Štrukelj. Borut B; Berlec. Aleš A
Key Findings
- Lactococcus lactis can be genetically modified to produce BPCâ157 either on its surface or secreted into the surrounding medium.
- Secretion via the Usp45 signal gave about four times more peptide (â117âŻng/ml) than surface display (â30âŻng/ml).
- Secreted BPCâ157 reduced reactive oxygen species production in fibroblast cells, indicating antiâinflammatory potential.
Practical Outcomes
- The work shows a possible probioticâbased way to deliver BPCâ157, but itâs still earlyâstage lab research. Biohackers canât yet use this method for personal health, and more animal and human studies are needed before it becomes a usable protocol.
Summary
Scientists engineered a friendly gut bacterium (Lactococcus lactis) to make and release the healing peptide BPCâ157. They found that letting the bacteria secrete the peptide gave higher amounts than just sticking it on the cell surface, and the secreted peptide lowered harmful oxidative stress in a lab cell model, hinting it could help gut inflammation.
Abstract
Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are attractive hosts for the expression of heterologous proteins and can be engineered to deliver therapeutic proteins or peptides to mucosal surfaces. The gastric stable pentadecapeptide BPC-157 is able to prevent and treat gastrointestinal inflammation by reducing the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). In this study, we used LAB Lactococcus lactis as a vector to deliver BPC-157 by surface display and trypsin shedding or by secretion to the growth medium. Surface display of BPC-157 was achieved by fusing it with basic membrane protein A (BmpA) or with the peptidoglycan binding domain of AcmA and Usp45 secretion signal. While the expression of BmpA-fusion proteins was higher than that of AcmA/Usp45-fusion protein, the surface display ability of BPC-157 was approximately 14-fold higher with AcmA/Usp45-fusion protein. Release of BPC-157 from the bacterial surface or from isolated fusion proteins by trypsinization was demonstrated with anti-BPC-157 antibodies or by mass spectrometry. The concentration of BPC-157 delivered by surface display via AcmA/Usp45-fusion was 30 ng/ml. This increased to 117 ng/ml by Usp45 signal-mediated secretion, making the latter the most effective lactococcal delivery approach for BPC-157. Secreted BPC-157 significantly decreased ROS production in 149BR fibroblast cell model, suggesting its potential benefit in the treatment of intestinal inflammations. Additionally, a comparison of different modes of small peptide delivery by L. lactis, performed in the present study, will facilitate the future use of L. lactis as peptide delivery vehicle.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-09-06T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s00253-018-9333-6
19
64