Chicken Heterophil Peptide 2
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Chicken Heterophil Peptide 2

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Chicken Heterophil Peptide 2 is an antibacterial peptide isolated from Gallus gallus, which belongs to the beta-defensin compound. It has activity against gram-positive bacteria, gram-negative bacteria and fungi.

Category
Functional Peptides
Catalog number
BAT-012867
Synonyms
Gly-Arg-Lys-Ser-Asp-Cys-Phe-Arg-Lys-Asn-Gly-Phe-Cys-Ala-Phe-Leu-Lys-Cys-Pro-Tyr-Leu-Thr-Leu-Ile-Ser-Gly-Leu-Cys-Ser-Phe-His-Leu-Cys
Sequence
GRKSDCFRKNGFCAFLKCPYLTLISGLCSFHLC
1. Antimicrobial activity of chicken and turkey heterophil peptides CHP1, CHP2, THP1, and THP3
E W Evans, F G Beach, K M Moore, M W Jackwood, J R Glisson, B G Harmon Vet Microbiol. 1995 Dec;47(3-4):295-303. doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(95)00126-3.
Four avian heterophil antimicrobial cationic peptides (Chicken Heterophil Peptides 1 and 2, and Turkey Heterophil Peptides 1 and 3) were evaluated for in vitro microbicidal activity against selected avian pathogens and human pathogens which are harbored by birds. At concentrations of 16-2 micrograms/ml, all four avian peptides effected a greater than 90% reduction in the survival of Candida albicans, Salmonella enteriditis, and Campylobacter jejuni. None of the peptides, including the known antimicrobial peptide protamine (used as a positive control), were able to reduce the survival of Pasteurella multocida by 90% at the maximum peptide concentration (16 micrograms/ml) tested. At 16 micrograms/ml, the turkey peptide THP3 did not effect a 90% reduction in survival of Bordetella avium, Escherichia coli, or Salmonella typhimurium, while all of the other peptides tested were effective at this concentration or less. This peptide, THP3, does not share the same homologous amino acid sequence shared by the other three peptides. Under our experimental conditions, none of the peptides neutralized Infectious Bronchitis Virus, an enveloped coronavirus of chickens.
2. Campylobacter jejuni is highly susceptible to killing by chicken host defense peptide cathelicidin-2 and suppresses intestinal cathelicidin-2 expression in young broilers
Albert van Dijk, et al. Vet Microbiol. 2012 Dec 7;160(3-4):347-54. doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2012.05.034. Epub 2012 Jun 7.
Little is known about the interactions of chicken host defense peptides (HDPs) with Campylobacter jejuni in young chicks. To examine the role of the chicken HDP, cathelicidin-2 (CATH-2) in host-pathogen interactions we challenged 4-day-old Ross 308 broilers with a chicken-derived C. jejuni isolate (WS356) and used the chicken pathogen Salmonella enterica Enteritidis phage type 4 (FGT1) as a reference. Immunohistochemical staining was used to localize CATH-2, C. jejuni and Salmonella enteritidis. Intestinal CATH-2 mRNA expression levels were determined by quantitative PCR. Antibacterial activities of CATH-2 peptide against C. jejuni and S. enteritidis isolates were assessed in colony count assays. In contrast to S. enteritidis, C. jejuni was not seen to attach to intestinal epithelium and C. jejuni challenge did not result in recruitment of CATH-2 containing heterophils to the small intestinal lamina propria. Minimal inhibitory concentrations found for CATH-2 peptide against human- and chicken-derived C. jejuni isolates were similar (0.6-2.5 μM) and much lower than for S. enteritidis (20 μM). Compared to wild-type C. jejuni 81116, the lipooligosaccharide (LOS)-deficient 81116ΔwaaF mutant was much more susceptible to CATH-2. Interestingly, CATH-2 mRNA expression levels in the small intestine were significantly lower 48 h p.i. in C. jejuni-challenged chicks. These findings indicate that human clinical and chicken-derived C. jejuni are equally highly susceptible to chicken CATH-2 peptide and that C. jejuni uses LOS to protect itself to some extent against HDPs. Moreover, suppression of intestinal CATH-2 expression levels may be part of the C. jejuni immune evasion strategy.
3. Differential effects of age on chicken heterophil functional activation by recombinant chicken interleukin-2
Michael Kogut, Lisa Rothwell, Pete Kaiser Dev Comp Immunol. 2002 Nov;26(9):817-30. doi: 10.1016/s0145-305x(02)00040-x.
Interleukin-2 (IL-2) exercises an array of biological effects on many cells including the functional activation of cells of the innate immune response. Heterophils, the avian equivalent of the neutrophil, function as professional phagocytes to aid in regulation of innate host defenses. The objective of the present studies was to examine the effects of recombinant chicken IL-2 (rChIL-2) on functional activities of heterophils from chickens during the first 3 weeks after hatch. Peripheral blood heterophils were isolated and incubated with either COS cell-derived rChIL-2 or supernatants from mock-transfected COS cells. rChIL-2 had no effect on the functional activities of heterophils from day-of-hatch chickens, but significantly increased the phagocytosis and bactericidal activity of heterophils from 7- and 14-day-old chickens. rChIL-2 induced no direct stimulation of the respiratory burst by heterophils, but primed heterophils from 7- and 14-day-old birds for an enhanced respiratory burst in response to phorbol ester stimulation. Lastly, rChIL-2 had neither direct nor priming effects on heterophil degranulation. The enhancing effects on heterophil functional activity by rChIL-2 were abated by a neutralizing anti-chicken IL-2 mAb and were therefore specific for this cytokine. These results show that rChIL-2 can directly activate chicken heterophils to exert effector functions, and that heterophil activation by rChIL-2 is also an age-dependent event.
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