| Literature DB >> 33765614 |
Michał Zimecki1, Jeffrey K Actor2, Marian L Kruzel3.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is a serious global health threat caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome of coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Symptoms of COVID-19 are highly variable with common hyperactivity of immune responses known as a "cytokine storm". In fact, this massive release of inflammatory cytokines into in the pulmonary alveolar structure is a main cause of mortality during COVID-19 infection. Current management of COVID-19 is supportive and there is no common clinical protocol applied to suppress this pathological state. Lactoferrin (LF), an iron binding protein, is a first line defense protein that is present in neutrophils and excretory fluids of all mammals, and is well recognized for its role in maturation and regulation of immune system function. Also, due to its ability to sequester free iron, LF is known to protect against insult-induced oxidative stress and subsequent "cytokine storm" that results in dramatic necrosis within the affected tissue. Review of the literature strongly suggests utility of LF to silence the "cytokine storm", giving credence to both prophylactic and therapeutic approaches towards combating COVID-19 infection.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cytokine storm; Immunopathology; Lactoferrin; SARS-CoV-2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33765614 PMCID: PMC7953442 DOI: 10.1016/j.intimp.2021.107571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Immunopharmacol ISSN: 1567-5769 Impact factor: 5.714
Immunoregulatory actions of LF in the context of infections and clinical insults.
| Model | LF treatment | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| human whole blood cell culture | rhLF in culture | regulation of gene expression involved in oxidative stress | Kruzel, et al. 2013 |
| PBMC activated by LPS | hLF in culture | regulatory effect on LFA-1 expression mediated by TNF α | Zimecki, et al. 1999 |
| human macrophages stimulated with EBV | hLF in culture | inhibition of chemokine production via suppression of NFκB | Zheng, et al. 2014 |
| monocytes from umbilical cord blood activated with LPS | hLF in culture | differentiation of monocytes into macrophages with decreased TLR-4 expression, TLR signaling and proinflammatory cytokine production | Wisgrill, et al. 2018 |
| hydrogen peroxide induced oxidative damage in epithelial intestinal cells | human apo LF prior to H2O2 challenge | increased survival of Caco-2 epithelial cells | Shoji, et al. 2007 |
| monocyte derived dendritic cells | bLF in culture | generation of dendritic cells with impaired ability to promote Th1 type response | Puddu, et al. 2011 |
| primary human megakaryocytes | hLF in culture | inhibition of platelet production in matured megakaryocytes | Matsumura-Takeda, et al. 2008 |
| human cytomelagovirus (HCMV) and human herpes virus 1 (HSV-1) infection of human embryonic lung cells | bLF in culture | inhibition of virus infection and replication by preventing virus adsorption and cell penetration | Hasegawa, et al. 1994 |
| rotavirus infection of enterocytic HT-12 cell line | apo and holo bLF in culture | inhibition of replication stronger by apo LF, binding of LF to virus particles | Superoti, et al. 1997 |
| adenovirus infection of HEP-2 cells | bLF and lactoferricin in culture | inhibition of infection by binding of LF to glycosaminoglucan receptor | Di Base, et al. 2003 |
| HSV infection of Vero cells | bLF and lactoferricin in culture | bLF inhibits only virus entry to cells and lactoferricin both entry and replication | Andersen, et al. 2004 |
| rhabdomycosarcoma and neuroblastoma SK-N-SH cells infected with EU71 enterovirus | bLF in culture | inhibition of replication by binding to the target cells and VP1 viral protein | Weng, et al. 2005 |
| influenza A virus infection | bLF in culture | protection by apoptosis inhibition, block of nuclear transcript | Pietraantoni, et al. 2010 |
| Egyptian avian lethal influenza A (H5N1) infection of MDCK cell line | bLF in culture | dose-dependent inhibition of replication | Taha, et al. 2010 |
| influenza virus infection in mice | bLF administered daily by gavage from 1 day before infection to day 6 postinfection | improved histology, lower number of leukocytes infiltrating BALF, lower IL-6 serum level | Shin, et al, 2005 |
| hepatitis B virus infection of cultured human hepatocytes (PH5CH8) | bLF or hLF in culture | prevention of the infection by preincubation of cells but not the virus by LF | Hara, et al. 2002 |
| hepatitis C infection of Hep G2 cells | human, camel, bovine or sheep LF in culture | prevention of HCV entry into cells by all LFs via direct interaction with the virus | El-Fakharany, et al. 2013 |
| echovirus infection of human cells in various assay systems | bLF digested with gastrointestinal enzymes in culture | inhibition of replication with a better effect of digested bLF than intact bLF | Furlund, et al. 2012 |
| norovirus (MNV) infection of RAW 264.7 cells | bLF in culture | dose-dependent decrease or block of cell damage and virus titres in the medium and cells, increase of IFN α and IFN β production by the cells | Ishikawa, et al. 2013 |
| Encephalomyocarditis virus infection of splenocytes | rhLF and bLF in culture | both LFs protective to the same degree in young and old mice | Zaczyńska, et al. 2017 |
| SARS pseudovirus infection of HEK293E/ACE2-Myc cells | bLF in culture | block of the binding of spike protein A to host cells at 4 °C, lack of spike protein /ACE2 integration disruption, role of heparin sulfate block by bLF | Lang, et al. 2011 |
| SARS-CoV-2 infection in Caco-2 cells | bLF in culture | induction of gene expression for IFNA1, IFNB1, TLR3, TLR7, IRT3, IRF7 and MAV, partial inhibition of virus infection and replication | Salaris, et al. 2021 |
| LPS-induced endotoxemia | bLF given i.v. 24 h prior to LPS | significant reduction of TNF α serum level, bLF alone induces serum IL-6 | Machnicki, et al. 1993 |
| LPS-induced endotoxemia | hLF given before, together or after LPS challenge | reduction of TNF α, IL-6, IL-10 and nitric oxide after 1 h pretreatment with hLF, other treatments not effective in reduction of IL-6 and IL-10 | Kruzel, et al. 2002 |
| LPS-induced inflammation | bLF administered i.p. before LPS | protection of gut mucosal integrity, increased survival | Kruzel, et al. 2000 |
| acute LPS-induced lung injury | i.p. injection of bLF 1 h before or after LPS | both protocols effective in decreasing histological, biochemical and immunological inflammatory parameters | Li, et al. 2012 |
| bLF given i.v. together with TDM | reduction in granuloma formation, increased levels of IL-10 and TGF β | Welsh, et al. 2010 | |
| rhLF in drinking water starting from infection, for 1–3 weeks | lung inflammation and bacteria number significantly reduced, increased total lymphocyte number and CD4+ IFN ɣ and IL-17 producing cells | Welsh, et al. 2011 | |
| Mycobacterial TDM-induced lung pathology | rhLF or rmLF delivered by gavage at day 4 and 6 after TDM | reduced production of IL-12p40, increased IL-6 and CXCL1, increased number of macrophages and diminished granuloma formation | Hwang, et al. 2017 |
| human monocytes and granulocytes infected with methicillin-resistant | rhLF in culture | increased production of INF ɣ and IL-2, decrease of TNF α,IL-6, IL 1β, IL-12p40, and IL-10 | Hwang, et al. 2014 |
| intranasal administration of aerosolized bLF | significant decrease of the neutrophil recruitment and proinflammatory cytokine levels, faster recover and body weight gain | Valenti, et al. 2017 | |
| peritonitis induced by Methicillin-resistant | rhLF given 2 h post-infection | modest increase in survival, reduced IL-6 and IL-17 serum levels | Hwang, et al. 2014 |
| surgery in mice | bLF given i.v. or per o.s. before thymectomy or splenectomy | suppression of IL 6 and TNF α after thymectomy, deeper after per o.s. treatment, weaker effects on splenectomy | Zimecki, et al. 1998 |
| ovalbumin (OVA) induced pleurisy in mice | bLF or hLF given buccally 24 h and 3 h before OVA | decrease of clinical manifestation of pleurisy, decrease of IL5 level in pleural exudates | de la Rosa, et al. 2008 |
| ovalbumin (OVA) responses in mice | bLF given i.p. before OVA | neutrophil and macrophage recruitment; Th1 polarization | Zimecki, et al. 2012 |
| hyperoxia in CD-1 mice | bLF in aerosol | reduction in lung edema, cell number in BALF, IL-1 β, IL-6, pulmonary fibrosis and DNA fragmentation, increase of survival from 20% to 66.7% | Chen, et al. 2014 |
| transcriptome profiling in rat spleen | rhLF per os or i.v. | largely overlapping changes in gene expression by both treatments, associated with upregulation of genes involved in oxidative stress and inflammation | Kruzel, et al. 2020 |
| healthy volunteers | bLF chewable tablets for 14 days | normalization of spontaneous TNF α and IL-6 production by PBMC cultures depending on initial immunological reactivity | Kruzel, et al. 2007 |
| healthy males | microencapsulated bLF, per os in two four week periods | significant effect for 200 mg daily doses, lowering CD69+ activation marker on CD4+ cells, increase in the volume of most frequent intestinal bacteria species | Dix, et al. 2018 |
| healthy volunteers, indomethacin-induced enteropathy | ingestion of 5 g rhLF, followed by 2 doses of indomethacin after 9 h and overnight | reduction of the increased by indomethacin small intestine permeability | Troost, et al. 2003 |
| PMBC from patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome | bLF in culture | inhibition of both spontaneous and LPS-induced PBMC proliferation, upregulation of IL-6 and TNF α production in septic survivors | Adamik, et al. 1998 |
| blood from patients diagnosed with severe sepsis or septic shock | rhLF in culture | LPS-induced TNF α production upregulated in patients with sustained anergy, inhibited or without effect in moderately reactive patients | Artym, et al, 2018 |
| COVID-19 patients | bLF as nutritional supplement, 4–6 daily doses for 10 days | complete and fast recovery within the first 4–5 days, prevention of the disease at lower doses in healthy persons having contacts with the patients | Serrano, et al. 2020 |
Fig. 1Lactoferrin to modulate oxidative stress. At normal physiological conditions superoxide will spontaneously dismutate and produce hydrogen peroxide. However, this enzymatic pathway can be circumvented in the presence of ferric ions (top line, right side) so that the hydrogen peroxide is reduced to highly reactive hydroxyl radicals which culminate in toxic protein adducts. By sequestering free ferric ions, LF has the potential to block the production of hydroxyl radicals and their subsequent toxic effects. Adapted from [120].
Fig. 2Potential for LF to regulate insult-induced inflammation. Exogenous LF can modulate insult-induced inflammation in a similar way as endogenous molecule by augmentation of low level responses or modulation of overaggressive cytokine response. Both effects serve to assist with tissue repair after insult. Adapted from [115].