Identification of a Novel Antibacterial Function of Mammalian Calreticulin
Yichao Ma, Jiachen Liu, Xinming Qin, Xiaojing Cui, Qian Yang

TL;DR
This study shows that calreticulin, a protein found in mammals, has antibacterial properties and could help fight infections in the respiratory system.
Contribution
The study is the first to systematically demonstrate calreticulin's antibacterial activity in a mammalian model.
Findings
Recombinant calreticulin inhibited the growth of several bacteria, including E. coli and Salmonella.
Calreticulin bound to bacteria and their lipopolysaccharides, inducing bacterial aggregation in the presence of calcium.
Intranasal administration of calreticulin reduced respiratory infection severity and bacterial load in a goat model.
Abstract
Calreticulin is a highly conserved and multifunctional molecular chaperone ubiquitously expressed in humans and animals. Beyond its well-established roles in calcium homeostasis, protein folding, and immune regulation, recent studies in aquatic species have suggested a previously unrecognized antimicrobial function of calreticulin. These findings raise the question of whether calreticulin also exerts antibacterial activity in terrestrial mammals, which has not been systematically investigated to date. To address this knowledge gap, we successfully constructed and expressed recombinant goat calreticulin using the Pichia pastoris expression system, yielding a protein of over 99% purity that predominantly exists in dimeric form. Functional assays demonstrated that both recombinant goat and human calreticulin exhibited preliminary inhibitory activity against Escherichia coli, Salmonella…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · Biochemical and Molecular Research
