Prophylactic administration of chicken cathelicidin-2 boosts zebrafish embryonic innate immunity

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    Abstract

    Chicken cathelicidin-2 (CATH-2) is a host defense peptide that exhibits immunomodulatory and antibacterial properties. Here we examined effects of CATH-2 in zebrafish embryos in the absence and presence of infection. Yolk-injection of 0.2-1.5 hours post-fertilized (hpf) zebrafish embryos with 2.6 ng/kg CATH-2 increased proliferation of phagocytic cells at 48 hpf by 30%. A lethal infection model was developed to test the prophylactic protective effect of CATH-2 peptide. Embryos (0.2-1.5 hpf) were injected with 2.6 ng/kg CATH-2, challenged with a lethal dose of fluorescently labeled S. enteritidis pGMDs3 at 28 hpf and monitored for survival. Prophylactic treatment with CATH-2 was found to delay infection starting at 22 hours post-infection (hpi). At 18-20 hpi, significantly lower (2-fold) fluorescence intensity and decreased bacterial loads were detected in peptide-treated embryos. Thus prophylactic administration of low CATH-2 concentrations confer partial protection in zebrafish embryos by boosting the innate immune system.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)108-114
    JournalDevelopmental and Comparative Immunology
    Volume60
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 23 Feb 2016

    Keywords

    • Host defense peptide
    • Chicken cathelicidin-2
    • Zebrafish embryos
    • Salmonella enteritidis
    • Immune stimulation

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