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.

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Flower Anatomy

Flower Anatomy & Pollination > Flower Anatomy Biologists frequently use dissections to study internal organs of animals. Dissections can also be used to view the structure and development of plant organs.
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Pollination

Pollination occurs when pollen grains move from anthers to a reproductively mature stigma. After pollen lands on the stigma, it initiates pollen tube formation. Pollen tubes are channels which grow down the length of the style to the ovules.
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Seed & Fruit Development

The number of seeds within a fruit is also tightly linked to fruit size and shape in species with multiple fused carpels. If only one ovule, or a subset of the total ovules, is fertilized, it can result in abnormal development close to the unfertilized ovules and fruit asymmetry (Figure 7c).
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Fruit Anatomy

The presence of structures within a flower, and the form of those structures, has important consequences for the development and appearance of fruits in tree crops. In this section we will examine floral morphology more closely to understand the relationship between flower and fruit structure.
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Vegetative & Floral Tissue Development

The animation of floral organogenesis (below) was created by Bridget Lamp and Vito Polito at UC Davis from a series of scanning electron micrographs. It simulates the development of the shoot apical meristem of an almond (Prunus dulcis) flower bud.
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Flower Development & Tree Morphology

Although flower tissue is derived from vegetative tissue, the location and type of vegetative tissue which develops into flowers, and ultimately fruits, varies among tree fruit and nut crop species grown in California.
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Terms & Definitions

Female reproductive structures stigma tip of pistil that receives pollen style long column that connects the stigma to the ovule ovule female germ cells that develop into seeds following fertilization ovary organ below the stigma and style which surrounds the ovules and develops into fruit tissu...
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Resources & Links

Ryugo, K. Fruit Culture: Its Science and Art. McGregor, S. E. Insect Pollination of Cultivated Crop Plants. Agricultural Handbook No. 496, Agriculture Research Service, USDA Jackson, D., N. Looney, M. Morley-Bunker, and G. Thiele (editors). Temperate and Subtropical Fruit Production. 3rd Edition.
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