Marine Drugs (May 2013)

A Shark Liver Gene-Derived Active Peptide Expressed in the Silkworm, Bombyx mori: Preliminary Studies for Oral Administration of the Recombinant Protein

  • Jun Li,
  • Inthrani Raja Indran,
  • Lisha Wang,
  • Wutong Wu,
  • Yaozhou Zhang,
  • Zuoming Nie,
  • Wei Yu,
  • Jian Chen,
  • Qing Sheng,
  • Wenping Zhang,
  • Jianqing Chen,
  • Ying Chen,
  • Yunlong Liu,
  • Lian Qian,
  • Zhengbing Lv

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/md11051492
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
pp. 1492 – 1505

Abstract

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Active peptide from shark liver (APSL) is a cytokine from Chiloscyllium plagiosum that can stimulate liver regeneration and protects the pancreas. To study the effect of orally administered recombinant APSL (rAPSL) on an animal model of type 2 diabetes mellitus, the APSL gene was cloned, and APSL was expressed in Bombyx mori N cells (BmN cells), silkworm larvae and silkworm pupae using the silkworm baculovirus expression vector system (BEVS). It was demonstrated that rAPSL was able to significantly reduce the blood glucose level in mice with type 2 diabetes induced by streptozotocin. The analysis of paraffin sections of mouse pancreatic tissues revealed that rAPSL could effectively protect mouse islets from streptozotocin-induced lesions. Compared with the powder prepared from normal silkworm pupae, the powder prepared from pupae expressing rAPSL exhibited greater protective effects, and these results suggest that rAPSL has potential uses as an oral drug for the treatment of diabetes mellitus in the future.

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