4.7 Article

Discovery of natural products capable of inducing porcine host defense peptide gene expression using cell-based high throughput screening

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40104-020-00536-0

Keywords

Antibiotic alternatives; High throughput screening; HDP inducers; Host defense peptides; Natural products

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31972576]
  2. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [6202004]
  3. Special Program on Science and Technology Innovation Capacity Building of BAAFS [KJCX20180414, KJCX201914]
  4. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2018-68003-27462, 2018-33610-28252]
  5. Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science and Technology [AR19-27]

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The study demonstrates that the newly-identified natural HDP-inducing compounds, identified through high-throughput screening, can stimulate endogenous HDP synthesis, enhance antibacterial activity against various bacteria in pigs, and have the potential to serve as alternatives to antibiotics in livestock production for prophylactic and therapeutic treatment of infectious diseases.
Background: In-feed antibiotics are being phased out in livestock production worldwide. Alternatives to antibiotics are urgently needed to maintain animal health and production performance. Host defense peptides (HDPs) are known for their broad-spectrum antimicrobial and immunomodulatory capabilities. Enhancing the synthesis of endogenous HDPs represents a promising antibiotic alternative strategy to disease control and prevention. Methods: To identify natural products with an ability to stimulate the synthesis of endogenous HDPs, we performed a high-throughput screening of 1261 natural products using a newly-established stable luciferase reporter cell line known as IPEC-J2/pBD3-luc. The ability of the hit compounds to induce HDP genes in porcine IPEC-J2 intestinal epithelial cells, 3D4/31 macrophages, and jejunal explants were verified using RT-qPCR. Augmentation of the antibacterial activity of porcine 3D4/31 macrophages against a Gram-negative bacterium (enterotoxigenic E. coli) and a Gram-positive bacterium (Staphylococcus aureus) were further confirmed with four selected HDP-inducing compounds. Results: A total of 48 natural products with a minimum Z-score of 2.0 were identified after high-throughput screening, with 21 compounds giving at least 2-fold increase in luciferase activity in a follow-up dose-response experiment. Xanthohumol and deoxyshikonin were further found to be the most potent in inducing pBD3 mRNA expression, showing a minimum 10-fold increase in IPEC-J2, 3D4/31 cells, and jejunal explants. Other compounds such as isorhapontigenin and calycosin also enhanced pBD3 mRNA expression by at least 10-fold in both IPEC-J2 cells and jejunal explants, but not 3D4/31 cells. In addition to pBD3, other porcine HDP genes such as pBD2, PG1-5, and pEP2C were induced to different magnitudes by xanthohumol, deoxyshikonin, isorhapontigenin, and calycosin, although clear gene- and cell type-specific patterns of regulation were observed. Desirably, these four compounds had a minimum effect on the expression of several representative inflammatory cytokine genes. Furthermore, when used at HDP-inducing concentrations, these compounds showed no obvious direct antibacterial activity, but significantly augmented the antibacterial activity of 3D4/31 macrophages (P < 0.05) against both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Conclusions: Our results indicate that these newly-identified natural HDP-inducing compounds have the potential to be developed as novel alternatives to antibiotics for prophylactic and therapeutic treatment of infectious diseases in livestock production.

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