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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2024 pubmed

Cell-free adipose tissue extracts as a novel treatment for rosacea by downregulating TRPV1.

Zhou. Liuyi L; Chen. Lulu L; Li. Ting T; Wang. Lu L; Lin. Shiqi S; Zhao. Ye Y; Wu. Sufan S; Jin. Tingting T

Key Findings

  • ATEs significantly decreased TRPV1 expression and calcium influx in keratinocytes stimulated with capsaicin.
  • Inflammatory mediators (KLK5, IL‑6, IL‑8, TNF‑α) were reduced after ATE treatment both in vitro and in LL‑37‑induced rosacea mice.
  • In vivo, ATEs lowered erythema scores, epidermal thickness, mast cell infiltration, and telangiectasia, while showing good biocompatibility.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers interested in skin health, the study suggests that topical or injectable preparations derived from human fat could help calm rosacea flare‑ups by targeting TRPV1‑driven inflammation. However, extracting and formulating ATEs is not a DIY‑friendly process, so the immediate actionable step is to watch for commercial products or clinical trials that bring this approach to market.

Summary

Researchers tested a liquid made from human fat tissue (called cell‑free adipose tissue extract, ATE) on a mouse model of rosacea that was triggered by the peptide LL‑37. The extract lowered the activity of a skin‑pain channel called TRPV1, reduced inflammation markers, and improved visible rosacea signs like redness and blood‑vessel dilation. The treatment was well‑tolerated in the animals.

Abstract

Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin disease that typically affects the central facial area. Its main clinical symptoms include paroxysmal flushing, telangiectasia, and non-temporary erythema. Cell-free adipose tissue extracts (ATEs) are liquid components extracted from human adipose tissue that contain large amounts of growth factors. Despite the scar-reducing, anti-aging, and wound-healing effects of ATEs, the efficacy of ATEs in rosacea remains unknown. Therefore, the anti-rosacea effects of ATEs were investigated in human cathelicidin peptide (LL-37) induced rosacea mice and capsaicin (CAP)-stimulated HaCaT keratinocytes. In vitro, ATEs significantly reduced TRPV1 expression, intracellular calcium ions influx and the release of inflammatory factors (such as KLK5, IL-6, IL-8 and TNF-α) after intervening in CAP-stimulated cells. The in vivo results revealed that ATEs alleviated rosacea symptoms, such as erythema score, erythema area, transepidermal water loss, abnormal epidermal thickness, mast cell infiltration and telangiectasia upon downregulating TRPV1 and CD31 expression. Moreover, the up-regulated TRPV1 protein expression was also recovered by ATEs administration in vivo and in vitro. Meanwhile, ATEs demonstrated good biocompatibility. In summary, ATEs could be a potential therapeutic agent for rosacea by regulating inflammation and alleviating telangiectasia.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-09-18T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41598-024-72593-8

References

46