Ketaki Deshpande
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ketakideshpande.bsky.social
Ketaki Deshpande
@ketakideshpande.bsky.social
👩‍🔬 PhD student at Leibniz Institute for New Materials 🇩🇪

🧫 Cell biologist unraveling life’s smallest mysteries

🦠 Bridging bacterial peptides and materials to unlock the future of health and therapeutics.
Pinned
🧪 New study alert 🧬💥

Happy to share our latest work on Living Therapeutics and testing them in a refined in-vitro endotoxemia model using macrophages. 🧫🦠

If you like living therapeutics, inflammation, or science that vibes, the paper’s here:
doi.org/10.1021/acsp...
Developing an In Vitro Model of Endotoxemia to Assess the Immunomodulatory Effects of Anti-Inflammatory Peptide-Secreting Living Therapeutics
Living therapeutics are attractive candidates to tackle the limitations of classically delivered therapeutic peptides, which are often poorly stable and require cost-intensive modifications. Their fun...
doi.org
Reposted by Ketaki Deshpande
New Paper!🧪 We developed an in vitro model of endotoxemia to investigate the antiinflammatory potential of living therapeutics. Check it out! pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/... @leibnizinm.bsky.social @pharmascihub.bsky.social @ketakideshpande.bsky.social @varunsays.bsky.social @shrikrishnans.bsky.social
Developing an In Vitro Model of Endotoxemia to Assess the Immunomodulatory Effects of Anti-Inflammatory Peptide-Secreting Living Therapeutics
Living therapeutics are attractive candidates to tackle the limitations of classically delivered therapeutic peptides, which are often poorly stable and require cost-intensive modifications. Their functional assessment is limited to animal experiments, which increase the complexity to evaluate the dynamic nature of these systems. Therefore, we developed an in vitro model of endotoxemia using macrophages to assess early-stage anti-inflammatory Living therapeutics. We refined the model based on three anti-inflammatory peptides (KCF-18, I6P7, and α-MSH) and identified suitable therapeutic concentrations and treatment durations. We applied the model to Lactiplantibacillus plantarum TF103, a probiotic engineered to secrete these peptides. The model revealed that Living therapeutics enhanced the effects of the peptides, requiring lower amounts of anti-inflammatory effects. This points to potential synergistic effects between peptides and bacteria. The model presented here allows the investigation of dynamic regimes, which could be useful in the development of complex systems such as the ones encountered in Living therapeutics.
pubs.acs.org
July 1, 2025 at 3:23 PM
🧪 New study alert 🧬💥

Happy to share our latest work on Living Therapeutics and testing them in a refined in-vitro endotoxemia model using macrophages. 🧫🦠

If you like living therapeutics, inflammation, or science that vibes, the paper’s here:
doi.org/10.1021/acsp...
Developing an In Vitro Model of Endotoxemia to Assess the Immunomodulatory Effects of Anti-Inflammatory Peptide-Secreting Living Therapeutics
Living therapeutics are attractive candidates to tackle the limitations of classically delivered therapeutic peptides, which are often poorly stable and require cost-intensive modifications. Their fun...
doi.org
July 1, 2025 at 8:50 PM
Reposted by Ketaki Deshpande
Excited to share our latest work, published in a peer-reviewed journal. We studied how Gram +/- probiotic bacteria would adapt in mechanical confinements - key part in understanding the fundamentals of Engineered living materials. Read it here:

pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Adaptations of Gram-Negative and Gram-Positive Probiotic Bacteria in Engineered Living Materials
Encapsulation of microbes in natural or synthetic matrices is a key aspect of engineered living materials, although the influence of such confinement on microbial behavior is poorly understood. A few ...
pubs.acs.org
May 14, 2025 at 10:50 PM
Reposted by Ketaki Deshpande