Amaranthus caudatus extract inhibits the invasion of E. coli into uroepithelial cells.
Mohanty. Soumitra S; Zambrana. Silvia S; Dieulouard. Soizic S; Kamolvit. Witchuda W; Nilsén. Vera V; Gonzales. Eduardo E; Östenson. Claes-Göran CG; Brauner. Annelie A
Key Findings
- The extract showed no direct antibacterial activity against uropathogenic E. coli.
- Treatment reduced mRNA levels of uroplakin‑1a and caveolin‑1 in bladder epithelial cells.
- Lowered expression of these proteins correlated with decreased bacterial adhesion and invasion.
- The extract did not increase expression of the antimicrobial peptides LL‑37 or human β‑defensin‑2.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study suggests Amaranthus caudatus might help protect bladder cells from infection, but it offers no clear dosage or protocol and doesn't enhance LL‑37 levels. The findings are mostly mechanistic and not immediately actionable for self‑directed health optimization.
Summary
A plant extract from Amaranthus caudatus doesn't kill E. coli directly, but it makes bladder cells less sticky for the bacteria by lowering some cell proteins. It doesn't boost the body's own antimicrobial peptide LL‑37.
Abstract
Amaranthus caudatus is traditionally used to treat infections. Based on its traditional usage, we investigated the effect of A. caudatus on the bladder epithelial cells in the protection of E. coli infection. The direct antimicrobial effects of A. caudatus on uropathogenic bacteria were investigated using minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) assay. Bladder epithelial cell lines T24 and 5637 and uropathogenic E. coli strain #12 were used to investigate the effect of A. caudatus. Bacterial adhesion and invasion into bladder cells treated with A. caudatus was analyzed. Expression of uroplakin-1a (UPK1A), β1 integrin (ITGB1), caveolin-1 (CAV1) and the antimicrobial peptides human β defensin-2 (DEFB4A) and LL-37 (CAMP) was evaluated using RT-PCR. No direct antibacterial effect on E. coli or any of the tested uropathogenic strains was observed by A. caudatus. However, we demonstrated reduced mRNA expression of uroplakin-1a and caveolin-1, but not β1 integrin after treatment of uroepithelial cells, mirrored by the decreased adhesion and invasion of E. coli. A. caudatus treatment did not induce increased gene expression of the antimicrobial peptides, LL-37 and human β-defensin-2. Our results showed that A. caudatus has a protective role on bladder epithelial cells against uropathogenic E. coli infection by decreasing the bacterial adhesion and invasion, thereby preventing infection.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-04-03T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.jep.2018.04.003
10
30