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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2024 pubmed 8 citations

Construction of exosome-loaded LL-37 and its protection against zika virus infection.

Wang. Chen C; Li. Min M; Xia. Xiaohui X; Fu. Yuxuan Y; Wang. Yi Y; Xu. Wei W; Wei. Hongqi H; Wei. Lin L

Key Findings

  • Exosome‑loaded LL‑37 is more stable in serum than free LL‑37
  • It crosses the placental barrier more efficiently and reduces fetal infection risk
  • It strongly lowers Zika infection and protects testicular tissue in animal models

Practical Outcomes

  • LL‑37 shows promise as an anti‑Zika agent, but the exosome delivery system is complex and not ready for DIY use. For now, biohackers can note the antiviral potential of LL‑37 but should wait for a practical, off‑the‑shelf formulation before trying it.

Summary

Scientists packaged the antimicrobial peptide LL-37 inside tiny cell‑derived bubbles called exosomes, which made the peptide last longer in the body, cross the placenta more easily, and block Zika virus better than the plain peptide. In mice, this approach also protected testicles and sperm from Zika damage.

Abstract

Zika virus (ZIKV) is an enveloped, single-stranded and positive-stranded RNA virus of the genus Flavivirus in the family Flaviviridae. ZIKV can cross the placental barrier and infect the fetus, causing microcephaly, congenital ZIKV syndrome, and even fetal death. ZIKV infection can also lead to testicular damage and male sterility. But no effective drugs and vaccines are available up to now. Previous studies have shown that the cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide LL-37 can protect against ZIKV infection. However, LL-37 is a secreted peptide, which can be easily degraded in vivo. We herein constructed exosome-loaded LL-37 (named LL-37-TM-exo and TM-LL-37-exo) using the transmembrane protein TM to load LL-37 onto the membrane of exosome. We found that exosome-loaded LL-37 could significantly inhibit ZIKV infection in vitro and in vivo, and LL-37-TM-exo had stronger antiviral activity than that of TM-LL-37-exo, which could significantly reduce ZIKV-induced testicular injury and sperm injury, and had broad-spectrum antiviral effect. Compared to free LL-37, exosome-loaded LL-37 showed a better serum stability, higher efficiency to cross the placental barrier, and stronger antiviral activity. The mechanism of exosome-loaded LL-37 against ZIKV infection was consistent with that of free LL-37, which could directly inactivate viral particles, reduce the susceptibility of host cells, and act on viral replication stage. Our study provides a novel strategy for the development of LL-37 against viral infection.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-03-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.antiviral.2024.105855

Citations

8