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Beneficial effect of Xuebijing against Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in Caenorhabditis elegans

Frontiers in Pharmacology 2022 29 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Le Zhang, Yuxing Wang, Le Zhang, Yuxing Wang, Yuxing Wang, Dayong Wang Chang Cao, Dayong Wang Chang Cao, Le Zhang, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Le Zhang, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Chang Cao, Chang Cao, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Le Zhang, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Yuxing Wang, Yike Zhu, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Wei Huang, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Yi Yang, Dayong Wang Haibo Qiu, Songqiao Liu, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang

Summary

Researchers found that the traditional Chinese medicine formulation Xuebijing protected Caenorhabditis elegans against Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection by enhancing immune pathways and reducing bacterial colonization, providing mechanistic insight into its clinical use for treating sepsis.

In the clinical intensive care units (ICU), the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) formulation of Xuebijing has been frequently used for treating sepsis. Nevertheless, the underlying pharmacological mechanisms of Xuebijing remain largely unclear. Caenorhabditis elegans is an important experimental host for bacterial infections. Using C. elegans as an animal model, we here examined the potential of Xuebijing treatment against bacterial infection and the underlying mechanisms. Xuebijing treatment could inhibit the reduction tendency of lifespan caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection. For the cellular mechanisms of this antibacterial infection property, we found that Xuebijing treatment rescued C. elegans lifespan to be against P. aeruginosa infection by inhibiting Pseudomonas colonization in the intestinal lumen. Meanwhile, the increase in the expression of antimicrobial genes induced by Pseudomonas infection was also suppressed by Xuebijing treatment. Moreover, the beneficial effect of Xuebijing against Pseudomonas infection depended on insulin, p38 MAPK, Wnt, DBL-1/TGF-β, ELT-2, and programmed cell death (PCD)-related signals. Although Xuebijing did not show obvious antibacterial activity, Xuebijing (100%) treatment could inhibit the Pseudomonas biofilm formation and decrease the expression of virulence genes ( lasA , lasB , rhlA , rhlC , phzA , phzM , phzH , and phzS ) and quorum sensing (QS)-related genes ( lasI , lasR , rhlI , rhlR, pqsA , and pqsR ). Our results support the potential role of Xuebijing treatment against bacterial infection in hosts.

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