A Natural Solution for California's Herds: African Catfish Peptides

California's cattle producers and agricultural communities are all too familiar with the rising challenge of antibiotic resistance, making common bacterial infections harder to treat in livestock. But imagine a future where we could tackle these infections with a natural, powerful alternative. Our research points to just that: antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) found in African catfish.

We're really excited about these peptides because African catfish thrive in pathogen-rich freshwater, naturally producing these robust immune compounds in their skin mucus as a defense. This natural origin makes them highly appealing alternatives to synthetic drugs.

Predicted Safety and Potent Action

One of the most compelling aspects of these AMPs is their predicted safety for mammals. Our initial computer analyses suggest that various catfish AMPs are generally recognized as safe (GRAS). We predict they'll be absorbed in the human intestine without causing liver, brain, or heart toxicity. Furthermore, lab tests on a promising peptide, NACAP-II, confirmed it was non-hemolytic, meaning it didn't damage rabbit red blood cells—a strong indicator of its potential safety for mammalian cells.

Beyond safety, these peptides demonstrate effectiveness against problematic bacteria. One study revealed NACAP-II's strong activity against Extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase (ESBL)-producing Escherichia coli—a critical concern for both animal and human health due to its resistance to many common antibiotics. Another peptide, ACAP-IV, also showed antibacterial activity against E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus. We believe these AMPs work by directly disrupting bacterial cell membranes, a mechanism that makes it harder for bacteria to develop resistance compared to how they resist traditional antibiotics.

ANR Publishing: Page

Review correspondence

The Manuscript FastTrack system generates automatic emails every time an action occurs to a submitted manuscript.
View Page
ANR Publishing: Page

Resubmissions

One of the three recommendations reviewers (and ultimately, you) can make to authors is Declined, but recommend to rework and resubmit. In general, ANRs philosophy is to encourage its authors to share their expertise with clientele, not to build our rejection percentage.
View Page
ANR Publishing: Page

Reviewing multi-chapter books

When authors log in, they receive instructions about how to submit a manuscript. Note the last paragraph. Authors: Please submit your manuscript in Word if possible; both .doc and .docx extensions are acceptable.
View Page
ANR Publishing: Page

Health and safety considerations

Agriculture is a hazardous occupation, ranking in the top five most hazardous industries in California and the nation. Visual images, as well as the written or spoken word, can serve to condone or even encourage behaviors, practices and conditions that lead to injury and death.
View Page
ANR Publishing: Page

Video peer review

Associate Editor involvement Due to staff time and resources used in video production, Associate Editors are involved in three stages of review: the idea the written outline or script the rough cut of the video The Associate Editor's involvement at the idea stage ensures that someone with programmat...
View Page
ANR Publishing: Page

Preparing manuscripts for production

Once peer review is complete, authors must prepare their manuscript and all accompanying artwork, tabular material, etc., for publication production. These instructions, Submitting the Final Manuscript to Communication Services, explain how to do that preparation.
View Page
ANR Publishing: Page

Single-subject publications

After ANR peer review is complete, here are the steps that authors can expect during publication production with Communication Services: CS editor (CS) copyedits the manuscript using Microsoft Word's track changes feature.
View Page
ANR Publishing: Page

Steps of multi-chapter books and manuals

CS editor (CS) copyedits the chapters using Microsoft Word's track changes feature. The copyedited files are set up so that authors can review and make changes directly on them and all their work will show up as tracked changes.
View Page
ANR Publishing: Page

Publications in Spanish

The vast majority of ANR foreign-language materials are in Spanish. Their peer review processmanaged by the Spanish-Language Materials Associate Editordiffers from that of English materials. ANR-numbered translations are made only from English text that has successfully passed ANR peer review.
View Page