Nutrients (Mar 2023)

<u>Hi</u>gh-<u>T</u>hroughput <u>C</u>AMP <u>A</u>ssay (HiTCA): A Novel Tool for Evaluating the Vitamin D-Dependent Antimicrobial Response

  • Carter Gottlieb,
  • Mason Henrich,
  • Philip T. Liu,
  • Vahe Yacoubian,
  • Jeffery Wang,
  • Rene Chun,
  • John S. Adams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15061380
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. 1380

Abstract

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Vitamin D is known to modulate human immune responses, and vitamin D deficiency is associated with increased susceptibility to infection. However, what constitutes sufficient levels or whether vitamin D is useful as an adjuvant therapeutic is debated, much in part because of inadequate elucidation of mechanisms underlying vitamin D’s immune modulatory function. Cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide (CAMP) has potent broad-spectrum activity, and the CAMP gene is regulated in human innate immune cells by active 1,25(OH)2D3, a product of hydroxylation of inactive 25(OH)D3 by CYP27B1-hydroxylase. We developed a CRISPR/Cas9-edited human monocyte-macrophage cell line containing the mCherry fluorescent reporter gene at the 3′ end of the endogenous CAMP gene. The High Throughput CAMP Assay (HiTCA) developed here is a novel tool for evaluating CAMP expression in a stable cell line that is scalable for a high-throughput workflow. Application of HiTCA to serum samples from a small number of human donors (n = 10) showed individual differences in CAMP induction that were not fully accounted for by the serum vitamin D metabolite status of the host. As such, HiTCA may be a useful tool that can advance our understanding of the human vitamin D-dependent antimicrobial response, which is being increasingly appreciated for its complexity.

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