The cathelicidin CATH-2 efficiently neutralizes LPS- and E. coli-induced activation of porcine bone marrow derived macrophages.
van Harten. Roel M RM; Veldhuizen. Edwin J A EJA; Haagsman. Henk P HP; Scheenstra. Maaike R MR
Key Findings
- CATH-2 and LL‑37 both suppress LPS‑triggered activation of pig M1 macrophages
- CATH-2 is more effective than LL‑37 and also reduces activation when whole E. coli bacteria are present
- Cross‑species peptides can be potent in pig immune cells, meaning the native pig peptide isn’t always the strongest
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that CATH-2 shows promise as an anti‑inflammatory agent that could be used in vaccine formulations or to modulate immune responses, but more human‑focused research is needed before any DIY dosing or protocols can be recommended.
Summary
A study in pig immune cells found that the peptide CATH-2 (and to a lesser extent LL‑37) can calm down inflammation caused by bacterial components, especially in the aggressive M1 type of macrophages, and CATH-2 even works when whole bacteria are present. This shows the peptide has strong anti‑inflammatory properties in a pig model, but it’s not yet clear how it works in humans or how to use it safely.
Abstract
Infectious diseases in pigs cause monetary loss to farmers and pose a zoonotic risk. Therefore, it is important to obtain more porcine specific immunological knowledge as a measure to protect against infectious diseases, for example by exploring immunomodulators that are usable as vaccine adjuvants. Cathelicidins are a class of host defence peptides (HDPs) able to directly kill microbes as well as exert a diverse range of effects on the immune system. The peptides have shown promise as immunomodulatory peptides in many applications, including vaccines. However, it is currently unknown what the precise effect of these peptides is on porcine immune cells and whether peptides of other species might also have a strong immunomodulatory effect on porcine macrophages. Mononuclear bone marrow cells of pigs, aged 5-6 months, were cultured into M1 or M2 macrophages and stimulated with LPS or whole bacteria in the presence of host defence peptides (HDPs). CATH-2 and LL-37 strongly inhibited LPS-induced activation of M1 macrophages, the inhibition of LPS-induced activation of M2 macrophages by HDPs was milder, showing that the peptides have selective effects on different cell types. Upon stimulation with whole bacteria, only CATH-2 could effectively inhibit macrophage activation, showing the potent anti-inflammatory potential of this peptide. These results show that porcine peptides are not necessarily the most active in a porcine system, and that CATH-2 is effective in a porcine system as an anti-inflammatory immune modulator, which can be used, for example, in inactivated pathogen vaccines.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-12-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.vetimm.2021.110369
9
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