The LL-37 domain: A clue to cathelicidin immunomodulatory response?
Leite. Michel Lopes ML; Duque. Harry Morales HM; Rodrigues. Gisele Regina GR; da Cunha. Nicolau Brito NB; Franco. Octávio Luiz OL
Key Findings
- LL‑37 is a key domain of cathelicidin peptides that has both antimicrobial and immune‑modulating effects
- Short fragments of LL‑37 (SK‑24, IV‑20, FK‑13, LL‑37) are thought to interact with human immune receptors
- The exact molecular way cathelicidins trigger immunity is still not fully understood
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, the paper suggests that LL‑37 fragments might be promising immune‑boosting agents, but it offers no concrete protocols or safety data, so any use would be experimental and require caution.
Summary
This review explains that the LL‑37 part of the cathelicidin family of natural antimicrobial peptides may also help control the immune system, and that smaller pieces of LL‑37 (like SK‑24, IV‑20, FK‑13) could be the parts that talk to human receptors. It doesn’t give new experimental data or dosing advice, just a conceptual overview.
Abstract
Host defense peptides (HDPs) are naturally occurring polypeptide sequences that, in addition to being active against bacteria, fungi, viruses, and other parasites, may stimulate immunomodulatory responses. Cathelicidins, a family of HDPs, are produced by diverse animal species, such as mammals, fish, birds, amphibians, and reptiles, to protect them against pathogen infections. These peptides have variable C-terminal domains responsible for their antimicrobial and immunomodulatory activities and a highly conserved N-terminal pre-pro region homologous to cathelin. Although cathelicidins are the major components of innate immunity, the molecular basis by which they induce an immune response is still unclear. In this review, we will address the role of the LL-37 domain and its SK-24, IV-20, FK-13 and LL-37 fragments in the immunity response. Other cathelicidins also share structural and functional characteristics with the LL-37 domain, suggesting that these fragments may be responsible for interaction between these peptides and receptors in humans. Fragments of the LL-37 domain can give us clues about how homologous cathelicidins, in general, induce an immune response.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-04-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.peptides.2023.171011
19
114