Reference
Collins, K., Younis, U., Tanyaratsrisakul, S., Polt, R., Hay, M., Mansour, H., & Ledford, J. (2021). Angiotensin-(1-7) Peptide Hormone Reduces Inflammation and Pathogen Burden during Infection in Mice. 13(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13101614
Abstract

The peptide hormone, angiotensin (Ang-(1-7)), produces anti-inflammatory and protective effects by inhibiting production and expression of many cytokines and adhesion molecules that are associated with a cytokine storm. While Ang-(1-7) has been shown to reduce inflammation and airway hyperreactivity in models of asthma, little is known about the effects of Ang-(1-7) during live respiratory infections. Our studies were developed to test if Ang-(1-7) is protective in the lung against overzealous immune responses during an infection with (Mp), a common respiratory pathogen known to provoke exacerbations in asthma and COPD patients. Wild type mice were treated with infectious Mp and a subset of was given either Ang-(1-7) or peptide-free vehicle via oropharyngeal delivery within 2 h of infection. Markers of inflammation in the lung were assessed within 24 h for each set of animals. During Mycoplasma infection, one high dose of Ang-(1-7) delivered to the lungs reduced neutrophilia and , as well as α and chemokines () associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Despite decreased inflammation, Ang-(1-7)-treated mice also had significantly lower Mp burden in their lung tissue, indicating decreased airway colonization. Ang-(1-7) also had an impact on RAW 264.7 cells, a commonly used macrophage cell line, by dose-dependently inhibiting TNF-α production while promoting Mp killing. These new findings provide additional support to the protective role(s) of Ang1-7 in controlling inflammation, which we found to be highly protective against live Mp-induced lung inflammation.