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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2024 pubmed 11 citations

Etiopathogenesis of Psoriasis: Integration of Proposed Theories.

Hernandez-Nicols. Brenda Fernanda BF; Robledo-Pulido. Juan José JJ; Alvarado-Navarro. Anabell A

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 over‑expression may act as an auto‑antigen that fuels psoriasis inflammation
  • Skin microbiome changes (e.g., more Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, fungi, viruses) are linked to disease severity
  • Oxidative stress and ROS imbalance activate the Th1/Th17 immune axis in psoriasis

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the take‑away is to be cautious about any supplement or regimen that dramatically raises LL‑37 levels, as it could potentially trigger auto‑immune skin issues. Supporting a balanced skin microbiome (e.g., with topical probiotics or hygiene practices) and using antioxidants may help mitigate some of the inflammatory triggers, but the paper doesn’t provide specific dosing or protocols.

Summary

The review explains why psoriasis happens, focusing on three ideas: the body’s own antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can act like an auto‑antigen and trigger inflammation, an imbalance of skin microbes may worsen the condition, and too‑much oxidative stress can drive immune pathways that cause skin plaques. It’s mostly basic science, not a how‑to guide for health‑hacking.

Abstract

Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory disease characterized by squamous and erythematous plaques on the skin and the involvement of the immune system. Global prevalence for psoriasis has been reported around 1-3% with a higher incidence in adults and similar proportions between men and women. The risk factors associated with psoriasis are both extrinsic and intrinsic, out of which a polygenic predisposition is a highlight out of the latter. Psoriasis etiology is not yet fully described, but several hypothesis have been proposed: 1) the autoimmunity hypothesis is based on the over-expression of antimicrobial peptides such as LL-37, the proteins ADAMTSL5, K17, and hsp27, or lipids synthesized by the PLA2G4D enzyme, all of which may serve as autoantigens to promote the differentiation of autoreactive lymphocytes T and unleash a chronic inflammatory response; 2) dysbiosis of skin microbiota hypothesis in psoriasis has gained relevance due to the observations of a loss of diversity and the participation of pathogenic bacteria such as <i>Streptococcus</i> spp. or <i>Staphylococcus</i> spp. the fungi <i>Malassezia</i> spp. or <i>Candida spp</i>. and the virus HPV, HCV, or HIV in psoriatic plaques; 3) the oxidative stress hypothesis, the most recent one, describes that the cell injury and the release of proinflammatory mediators and antimicrobial peptides that leads to activate of the Th1/Th17 axis observed in psoriasis is caused by a higher release of reactive oxygen species and the imbalance between oxidant and antioxidant mechanisms. This review aims to describe the mechanisms involved in the three hypotheses on the etiopathogeneses of psoriasis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-01-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1080/08820139.2024.2302823

Citations

11

References

461