Journal: Frontiers in Microbiology
Article Title: Postbiotics derived from recombinant lactic acid bacteria exhibit high IL6-binding capacity and suppress IL6-induced STAT3 signaling
doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2025.1657810
Figure Lengend Snippet: Cytokine binding ability of recombinant L. lactis bacteria displaying different binders of proinflammatory cytokines on their surface upon exposure to bacteria-killing treatments. ELISA-determined concentrations of recombinant IL6 (A) , TNF (B) , IL17 (C) , and IL8 (D) that remained in the solution following incubation with the corresponding strain of bacteria before and after treatment with heat (70 °C, 40 min or 100 °C, 30 min), sonication, ethanol, UV, and gamma irradiation. pSD-ZIL6, L. lactis displaying ZIL6 affibody; pSD-ZTNF, L. lactis displaying anti-TNF affibody; pSD-Fyn17, L. lactis displaying anti-IL17 fynomer; pSD-EVA, L. lactis displaying anti-IL8 evasin; Ctrl: L. lactis control cells containing empty plasmid pNZ8148. The results are presented as means ± SD of three technical replicates of a representative experiment. ns, p = 0.09; *, p ≤ 0.05; **, p = 0.002; ***, p < 0.001 (unpaired two-tailed t -test).
Article Snippet: Bacteria-bound IL6 was detected with rabbit anti-human IL6 polyclonal antibodies (21865-1-AP, Proteintech) and goat anti-rabbit Alexa Fluor 488-conjugated secondary antibodies (4412, Cell Signaling Technologies).
Techniques: Binding Assay, Recombinant, Bacteria, Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay, Incubation, Sonication, Irradiation, Control, Plasmid Preparation, Two Tailed Test