Host defense peptides human β defensin 2 and LL-37 ameliorate murine necrotizing enterocolitis.
Lueschow-Guijosa. Shiloh R SR; Stanford. Amy H AH; Berger. Jennifer N JN; Gong. Huiyu H; Boly. Timothy J TJ; Jensen. Benjamin A H BAH; Nordkild. Peter P; Leegwater. Alexandra J AJ; Wehkamp. Jan J; Underwood. Mark A MA; McElroy. Steven J SJ
Key Findings
- LL‑37 treatment reduced NEC injury scores in mice
- hBD2 reduced injury scores when used as pretreatment and treatment
- LL‑37’s benefit appears linked to antimicrobial activity, whereas hBD2 improves barrier integrity and lowers inflammation
Practical Outcomes
- These results suggest LL‑37 and hBD2 could one day support gut health and barrier function, but they are early‑stage mouse data and not ready for human dosing or protocols. Enthusiasts should view this as a promising clue rather than a direct supplement recommendation.
Summary
In mouse studies, two natural immune peptides, LL‑37 and hBD2, helped protect the gut from severe damage that mimics a serious infant disease. Giving LL‑37 after injury lowered gut injury scores, likely by killing harmful microbes, while hBD2 worked both before and after injury by calming inflammation and strengthening the gut lining.
Abstract
Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a leading cause of preterm infant morbidity and mortality. Treatment for NEC is limited and non-targeted, which makes new treatment and prevention strategies critical. Host defense peptides (HDPs) are essential components of the innate immune system and have multifactorial mechanisms in host defense. LL-37 and hBD2 are two HDPs that have been shown in prior literature to protect from neonatal sepsis-induced mortality or adult inflammatory bowel disease, respectively. Therefore, this article sought to understand if these two HDPs could influence NEC severity in murine preclinical models. NEC was induced in P14-16 C57Bl/6 mice and HDPs were provided as a pretreatment or treatment. Both LL-37 and hBD2 resulted in decreased NEC injury scores as a treatment and hBD2 as a pretreatment. Our data suggest LL-37 functions through antimicrobial properties, while hBD2 functions through decreases in inflammation and improvement of intestinal barrier integrity.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-05-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.isci.2024.109993
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