Mechanical bacterial lysate enhances antimicrobial barrier mechanisms in human airway epithelial cells.
Sidoti Migliore. Giacomo G; Campana. Stefania S; Barberi. Chiara C; De Pasquale. Claudia C; Pezzino. Gaetana G; Cavaliere. Riccardo R; Orecchia. Paola P; Ginestra. Giovanna G; Mandalari. Giuseppina G; Del Zotto. Genny G; Bonaccorsi. Irene I; Carrega. Paolo P; Mingari. Maria Cristina MC; Ferlazzo. Guido G
Key Findings
- Sublingual bacterial lysate increased LL‑37 and beta‑defensin‑2 levels in saliva of healthy volunteers
- In bronchial epithelial cells the lysate raised adhesion molecules (ICAM‑1, E‑cadherin) and the growth factor amphiregulin
- The lysate triggered beta‑defensin‑2 production and antimicrobial activity, plus IL‑23‑driven IL‑22 signaling that further boosts peptide defenses
Practical Outcomes
- Using a sublingual polyvalent bacterial lysate supplement may enhance airway barrier integrity and raise antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37, potentially lowering infection risk. Start with low‑dose products and monitor tolerance, recognizing that larger trials are still needed to confirm benefits.
Summary
A bacterial lysate taken under the tongue appears to boost the body’s natural antimicrobial defenses in the airways, raising levels of key peptides like LL‑37 and beta‑defensin‑2 and helping cells stick together and grow. This suggests a simple supplement could support respiratory health, though the evidence is still early and not a full clinical proof.
Abstract
Polyvalent mechanical bacterial lysate is effective in the prevention of respiratory tract infections, although its mechanism of action is not entirely elucidated. Because epithelial cells constitute the frontline defense against infections, we investigated the molecular mechanisms of innate response exerted by bronchial epithelial cells in the presence of polyvalent mechanical bacterial lysate. By using primary human bronchial epithelial cells, we observed that polyvalent mechanical bacterial lysate was able to increase the expression of cellular adhesion molecules such as ICAM-1 and E-cadherin, as well as the expression of amphiregulin, a growth factor able to support human bronchial epithelial cell proliferation. Remarkably, polyvalent mechanical bacterial lysate promoted in human bronchial epithelial cells the de novo expression of human β-defensin-2, a major antimicrobial peptide, conferring them a direct antimicrobial activity. Moreover, polyvalent mechanical bacterial lysate-stimulated human bronchial epithelial cells provided signals for increased IL-22 production by innate lymphoid cells via IL-23, which could further contribute to the release of antimicrobial peptides by epithelial cells. In agreement with these in vitro data, the concentration of both IL-23 and antimicrobial peptides (human β-defensin-2 and LL-37) increased in the saliva of healthy volunteers after sublingual administration of polyvalent mechanical bacterial lysate. Altogether, these results indicate that polyvalent mechanical bacterial lysate administration might support mucosal barrier integrity and promote mechanisms of antimicrobial activity in airway epithelial cells.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-05-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1093/jleuko/qiad003
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