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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2024 pubmed 5 citations

Metformin modulates corticosteroids hormones in adrenals cells promoting Mycobacterium tuberculosis elimination in human macrophages.

Gonzalez-Muñiz. Oscar E OE; Rodriguez-Carlos. Adrián A; Santos-Mena. Alan A; Jacobo-Delgado. Yolanda M YM; Gonzalez-Curiel. Irma I; Rivas-Santiago. Cesar C; Navarro-Tovar. Gabriela G; Rivas-Santiago. Bruno B

Key Findings

  • Metformin increases DHEA synthesis without raising cortisol in adrenal cells
  • Supernatants from metformin‑treated adrenal cells reduce Mycobacterium tuberculosis load in macrophages via higher pro‑inflammatory cytokines and AMPs (HBD‑2, HBD‑3)
  • LL‑37 and HBD‑3 can directly modulate adrenal steroid production, lowering cortisol and DHEA levels

Practical Outcomes

  • Metformin might be useful for supporting innate immunity and balancing stress hormones, but the evidence is still cell‑based. LL‑37 shows potential as an immune‑modulating peptide, yet no dosing or safety data exist for humans. Biohackers should view these findings as early‑stage insights rather than actionable protocols.

Summary

The study shows that metformin can help keep cortisol steady while boosting DHEA production in adrenal cells, and that fluids from these metformin‑treated cells lower TB bacteria in immune cells by raising inflammation signals and antimicrobial peptides. It also found that the natural peptide LL‑37 (and HBD‑3) can change hormone production in adrenal cells, lowering both cortisol and DHEA. These results are from lab experiments, not human trials.

Abstract

Research suggests that both tuberculosis (TB) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) have an immuno-endocrine imbalance characterized by dysregulated proinflammatory molecules and hormone levels (high cortisol/DHEA ratio), impeding an effective immune response against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) driven by cytokines, antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), and androgens like DHEA. Insulin, sulfonylurea derivatives, and metformin are commonly used glucose-lowering drugs in patients suffering from TB and T2DM. For this comorbidity, metformin is an attractive target to restore the immunoendocrine mechanisms dysregulated against Mtb. This study aimed to assess whether metformin influences cortisol and DHEA synthesis in adrenal cells and if these hormones influence the expression of proinflammatory cytokines and AMPs in Mtb-infected macrophages. Our results suggest that metformin may enhance DHEA synthesis while maintaining cortisol homeostasis. In addition, supernatants from metformin-treated adrenal cells decreased mycobacterial loads in macrophages, which related to rising proinflammatory cytokines and AMP expression (HBD-2 and 3). Intriguingly, we find that HBD-3 and LL-37 can modulate steroid synthesis in adrenal cells with diminished levels of cortisol and DHEA, highlighting the importance of crosstalk communication between adrenal hormones and these effectors of innate immunity. We suggest that metformin's effects can promote innate immunity against Mtb straight or through modulation of corticosteroid hormones.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-07-24T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.tube.2024.102548

Citations

5

References

53