Bacillus safensis from
Sauerkraut Alleviates Acute Lung Injury Induced by Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus through the Regulation of M2
Macrophage Polarization via Its Metabolite Esculin
posted on 2024-12-26, 16:34authored byTianxu Pan, Minghan Li, Jialin Guo, Dongyu Zhao, Xin Liu, Haibin Huang, Nan Wang, Shuyuan Yu, Jiayao Guan, Mingxiao Liu, Shumin Zhang, Chunfeng Wang, Guilian Yang
Sauerkraut contains various fermentative microorganisms
that produce
active metabolites, enhancing immunity and resistance to infections.
However, its effects on methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA)-induced acute lung injury (ALI) remain
unclear. Using RAW264.7 cells and a mouse model, we demonstrated that Bacillus safensis SK14 (BS SK14), an understudied
fermentative bacterium, has an immunomodulatory effect on MRSA-induced
ALI. BS SK14 significantly reduced the inflammatory responses. Supplementation
with live BS SK14 or its culture supernatant increased survival rates,
reduced lung damage, and attenuated inflammation in ALI model mice.
LC–MS/MS analysis identified esculin as the key metabolite
responsible for these effects. BS SK14 produces esculin via the gut–lung
axis, inhibiting the TLR2–MyD88–NF-κB pathway,
reducing Keap1 levels, and activating the Nrf2–ARE pathway.
This decreased MRSA-induced M1 polarization and increased M2 polarization,
enhancing antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities in mice. Collectively,
these results reveal that BS SK14 and its metabolite esculin exert
therapeutic effects on MRSA-induced ALI through a multifactorial strategy.