1. Academic Validation
  2. Sodium caseinate induces mouse granulopoiesis

Sodium caseinate induces mouse granulopoiesis

  • Inflamm Res. 2012 Apr;61(4):367-73. doi: 10.1007/s00011-011-0421-7.
V Domínguez-Melendez 1 O Silvestre-Santana L Moreno-Fierros I Aguiñiga-Sánchez Ledesma Martínez R Marroquin-Segura A L García-Hernández B Weiss-Steider A Marché-Cova A Monroy-García L Mora-García Edelmiro Santiago-Osorio
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Laboratorio de Hematopoyesis y Leucemia, UNAM, Mexico, D.F., Mexico.
Abstract

Objective and design: Sodium caseinate (CasNa) induces differentiation and M-CSF production in mouse band granulocytes in vitro; however, it is not yet known if this molecule can also induce the proliferation and activation of the granulocyte lineage in vivo. In this work we evaluated the induction in vivo of granulopoiesis and the activation of granulocytes in mice treated with CasNa.

Material or subjects: BALB/c male mice 8-12 weeks old were used.

Treatment: The Animals were inoculated intraperitoneally with 1 ml of CasNa (10% in PBS p/v) four times (every 48 h).

Methods: Granulocyte proliferation was evaluated by flow cytometry; activation was evaluated by phagocytic indices. The cytokine was measured using an ELISA assay.

Results: We show that CasNa increased bone marrow granulopoiesis percentage (38.35 ± 10.88 vs. 64.94 ± 34.14 BrdU+/Gr-1+ cells) and the granulocytes generated presented increased phagocytic indices (0.3 ± 0.1 vs. 0.6 ± 0.11, p < 0.05). We also show that G-CSF (974 ± 411 vs. 3189 ± 350 pg/ml, p < 0.05) and GM-CSF increased in serum, but only G-CSF in bone marrow plasma.

Conclusions: CasNa induces granulopoiesis with functional granulocytes, suggesting that this molecule could be an innate immune system activator.

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