Oral Fucoidan Attenuates Lung Pathology and Clinical Signs in a Severe Influenza A Mouse Model
Claire Richards, Neil Williams, J. Helen Fitton, Damien N. Stringer, Samuel S. Karpiniec, Ah Young Park
Abstract
-derived fucoidan (UPF) was assessed in a severe influenza A (H1N1, PR8) infection model in mice. Initially, UPF was gavaged at 3.52 mg daily in a treatment model. Gross lung pathology (consolidation) was significantly reduced as compared to controls. UPF was then presented as a feed supplement at a rate of either nil, 3.52 mg/day or 7.04 mg/day in a prophylactic model, dosed three days before infection. A significant improvement was observed in the clinical signs of ill-health, as well as a reduction in gross lung pathology in animals treated with the higher dose, although there was no significant reduction in lung viral titres.
Topics & Concepts
FucoidanInflammationLungVirusPathologyImmunologyMedicineVirologyBiologyBiochemistryInternal medicinePolysaccharideSeaweed-derived Bioactive CompoundsImmune Response and InflammationMacrophage Migration Inhibitory Factor