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Steamed panax notoginseng mitigates CA-MRSA USA300-induced necroptosis in human neutrophils

Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Zhang, Lulu;
Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Feng, Xiaoyu;
Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
An, Hongsa;
Affiliation
Medical Experimental Center ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Yang, Weifeng;
Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Xia, Yuwen;
Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Wen, Bo;
Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Zheng, Haoran;
Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Chen, Yihuan;
Affiliation
Department of Pharmacology ,Yale University School of Medicine ,New Haven ,CT ,United States
Cheng, Yungchi;
Affiliation
Dermatological Department ,Beijing Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Capital Medical University ,Beijing ,China
Jiang, Chunyan;
Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Lu, Cheng;
Affiliation
Institute of Basic Research in Clinical Medicine ,China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences ,Beijing ,China
Tan, Yong

Background Community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) disrupts innate immunity by inducing necroptosis in polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs), a process linked to excessive inflammation and tissue damage. CA-MRSA releases virulence factors that enhance its pathogenicity by disrupting the host’s innate immune response, particularly impairing the phagocytic function of PMNs. Steamed Panax notoginseng (S-PN), a traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), has demonstrated immune-regulatory and anti-inflammatory properties, showing promising therapeutic effects in alleviating the severe inflammatory responses induced by pathogenic microbial infections. Objective This study aims to investigate the pharmacological effects and mechanisms of S-PN alleviating CA-MRSA-induced PMN necroptosis by suppressing MRSA virulence factors and inhibiting the RIPK1/RIPK3/MLKL signaling pathway, thereby attenuating inflammatory damage. Methods A co-culture model of MRSA USA300 strain and PMNs isolated from healthy human blood was established to observe the changes in necroptosis marker HMGB1, PMNs counts, ROS, chemokine MCP-1 and pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β, IL-8, TNF-α. RNA-seq was employed to analyze the effects of S-PN on the transcriptional expression of pathogenesis-related genes of MRSA. RT-PCR was utilized to validate the expression of S-PN on MRSA virulence factors and PMNs necroptosis related genes. Results S-PN significantly inhibited HMGB1, ROS, MCP-1, IL-1β and IL-8 in MRSA-PMN co-cultures, the PMN count in the S-PN group was higher than that in the model group. S-PN downregulated MRSA pathogenic-associated S. aureus infection and quorum sensing signaling pathways, and significantly reduced the virulence factors PSM and PVL. S-PN suppressed the expression of genes associated with necroptosis ripk1, ripk3, and mlkl in PMNs. Conclusion S-PN alleviates CA-MRSA infection-induced immune damage through dual mechanisms: suppression of bacterial virulence factors (PSM and PVL) and inhibition of PMNs necroptosis. These findings underscore its potential as a complementary therapeutic strategy against CA-MRSA infections, providing a theoretical foundation for integrating TCM into adjuvant treatments for drug-resistant bacterial infections.

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License Holder: Copyright © 2025 Zhang, Feng, An, Yang, Xia, Wen, Zheng, Chen, Cheng, Jiang, Lu and Tan.

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