Recombinant Lactococcus lactis Expressing Human LL-37 Prevents Deaths from Viral Infections in Piglets and Chicken.
Zhang. Hanlin H; Dong. Meng M; Xu. Huihui H; Li. Hongyue H; Zheng. Aihua A; Sun. Gang G; Jin. Wanzhu W
Key Findings
- Oral Lactococcus lactis producing LL‑37 lowered mortality from multiple viruses in piglets and chickens
- Short‑term sub‑chronic toxicity tests in rats showed no cumulative toxicity
- Treated piglets regained weight and chickens lived longer after infection
Practical Outcomes
- LL‑37 delivered via a probiotic looks promising as an antiviral and appears safe in animal models, suggesting it could be a candidate for human self‑experiments. However, optimal dosing, formulation, and human safety are still unknown, so it’s not ready for mainstream use yet.
Summary
Scientists made a friendly bacteria that makes the human peptide LL‑37 and gave it as a pill to animals. It helped piglets and chickens survive deadly viral infections, restored their weight gain, and didn’t cause obvious toxicity in rats. The work shows oral LL‑37 can work as an antiviral in animals, but it’s still far from proven in people.
Abstract
Novel antibiotic substitutes are increasingly in demand in the animal husbandry industry. An oral recombinant Lactococcus lactis (L. lactis) expressing human LL-37 (oral LL-37) was developed and its safety and antiviral effectiveness in vivo was tested. In addition to impairing liposome integrity, LL-37 polypeptide from recombinant L. lactis could prevent the host cell infection by a variety of viruses, including recombinant SARS, SARS-CoV-2, Ebola virus, and vesicular stomatitis virus G. Subchronic toxicity studies performed on Sprague-Dawley rats showed that no cumulative toxicity was found during short-term intervention. Oral LL-37 treatment after the onset of fever could reduce mortality in piglets infected with porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus. Moreover, body weight gain of piglets receiving treatment was progressively restored, and nucleic acid positive rebound was not undetected after discontinuation. Oral LL-37 consistently increased the lifespan of chickens infected with Newcastle viruses. These findings suggested a potential use of recombinantly modified microorganisms in veterinary medicine.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-09-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s12602-023-10155-6
3
69