4.7 Article

Effect of Porcine Colostral Exosomes on T Cells in the Peripheral Blood of Suckling Piglets

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 12, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani12172172

Keywords

piglet; colostrum; exosome; T cells; early post-natal development

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [17H03909]

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In this study, it was found that porcine colostral exosomes can increase the proportion of Tc cells in the peripheral blood of suckling piglets by stimulating IL-2 production. The results suggest that porcine colostral exosomes may play a role in the healthy development of piglets.
Simple Summary Exosomes in porcine colostrum have gained attention as the possible key compounds involved in the growth and/or development of suckling piglets. In this study, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from suckling piglets were cultured with or without milk-derived exosomes (control) in vitro. Porcine colostral exosomes increased the proportion of cytotoxic T (Tc) cells, while this phenomenon was not observed in PBMC whose endocytosis was inhibited. Moreover, exosome-treated PBMCs had a higher cytokine IL-2 concentration in the culture supernatant than the control. The present study demonstrated that porcine colostral exosomes could increase the Tc cell proportion in the peripheral blood of a suckling piglet, with the underlying mechanism believed to be the stimulation of IL-2 production in PBMCs via endocytosis. Growing evidence indicates that porcine colostral exosomes may contribute to the healthy development of piglets. Here, we evaluated in vitro the effect of porcine milk-derived exosomes, in particular colostral exosomes, on T cells in the peripheral blood of suckling piglets. A total of seven sows and thirteen suckling piglets were used. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from suckling piglets were cultured with or without milk-derived exosomes (control). Using flow cytometry, the proportion of each T cell subset in cultured PBMCs was analyzed three days post-incubation. PBMCs cultured with porcine colostral exosomes had a higher proportion of CD3(+)CD4(-)CD8(+) T cells (cytotoxic T cells; Tc) than the control. However, exosomes induced no increase in the Tc cell population in PBMC whose endocytosis was inhibited. We further measured the concentrations of cytokines in the culture supernatant. Exosome-treated PBMCs had a higher cytokine IL-2 concentration than the control. The present study demonstrated that porcine colostral exosomes could increase the Tc cell proportion in the peripheral blood of suckling piglets, with the underlying mechanism believed to be the stimulation of IL-2 production in PBMCs via endocytosis. Moreover, our results suggested that porcine colostral exosomes were involved in the development of cellular immunity in suckling piglets.

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