AI Article Synopsis

  • Immunostimulants, particularly through the activation of macrophages, are crucial for treating immunodeficiency and boosting the immune response, providing a key area of research in immunopharmacology and cancer prevention.
  • Researchers have developed a low-molecular-weight, water-soluble yeast glucan (WSY glucan) to overcome the solubility issues of traditional beta-glucans, leading to a better understanding of its immune-enhancing effects.
  • Treatment with WSY glucan significantly increased the production of inflammatory mediators and pro-inflammatory cytokines in macrophages, improved macrophage morphology, enhanced phagocytic activity, and promoted wound healing in keratinocytes, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic option for immune-related diseases.

Article Abstract

Immunostimulants play an important role in the treatment of immunodeficiency. Macrophages are the first line in our immune defense system and play a critical role in the immune response. Therefore, finding new and better substances to induce an immune response by activating macrophages is an attractive research topic, especially in the fields of immunopharmacology and cancer prevention. Keratinocytes actively crosstalk with immune cells during wound repair, so enhancing the function of keratinocytes is also an important part of improving immunity. Beta-glucans are naturally occurring polysaccharides, consisting of d-glucose monomers linked by beta-glycosidic bonds. Several studies have investigated the immunomodulatory effects of beta-glucan, such as its anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties. However, the use of yeast cell wall glucan has been limited because it is not soluble in water. In this study, we produced low-molecular-weight water-soluble yeast glucan (WSY glucan) and confirmed various aspects of its immune-enhancing effect. The structure of the beta-(1→3) and (1→6) bonds of WSY glucan were confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (H-NMR) analysis. Our results showed that treatment with WSY glucan significantly and dose-dependently induced the production of inflammatory mediators (prostaglandin E (PGE) and nitric oxide (NO)) and pro-inflammatory cytokines (tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α and interleukin (IL)-6) in macrophages. In addition, WSY glucan treatment showed changes in the morphological structure of the macrophages and promoted phagocytic activity of the macrophages and wound healing in keratinocytes. Based on these results, WSY glucan is considered as a potential candidate for the treatment of diseases related to the weakening of the immune system without the limitation of insolubility.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8965850PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrep.2022.101256DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Immunostimulants, particularly through the activation of macrophages, are crucial for treating immunodeficiency and boosting the immune response, providing a key area of research in immunopharmacology and cancer prevention.
  • Researchers have developed a low-molecular-weight, water-soluble yeast glucan (WSY glucan) to overcome the solubility issues of traditional beta-glucans, leading to a better understanding of its immune-enhancing effects.
  • Treatment with WSY glucan significantly increased the production of inflammatory mediators and pro-inflammatory cytokines in macrophages, improved macrophage morphology, enhanced phagocytic activity, and promoted wound healing in keratinocytes, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic option for immune-related diseases.
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Biotransformation via solid state fermentation (SSF) mediated by microorganisms is a promising approach to produce useful products from agricultural biomass. Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) that are commonly found in fermented foods have been shown to exhibit extracellular proteolytic, β-glucosidase, β-mannosidase, and β-mannanase activities. Therefore, extracellular proteolytic, cellulolytic, and hemicellulolytic enzyme activities of seven strains (a prominent species of LAB) isolated from Malaysian foods were compared in this study.

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Galactose-depleted xyloglucan is dysfunctional and leads to dwarfism in Arabidopsis.

Plant Physiol

April 2015

Complex Carbohydrate Research Center (Y.K., M.J.P., U.A., S.P., S.T.T., M.G.H., A.G.D., W.S.Y., M.A.O.), Department of Plant Biology (M.G.H.), and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (A.G.D., W.S.Y.), University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602;Tobacco Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Qingdao, Shandong 266101, China (Y.K.);United States Department of Energy Plant Research Laboratory (L.R., F.B.) and United States Department of Energy Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center (F.B.), Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824; andDepartment of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269 (X.L., W.-D.R.)

Xyloglucan is a polysaccharide that has important roles in the formation and function of the walls that surround growing land plant cells. Many of these plants synthesize xyloglucan that contains galactose in two different side chains (L and F), which exist in distinct molecular environments. However, little is known about the contribution of these side chains to xyloglucan function.

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