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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2023 pubmed 11 citations

Oligomer Dynamics of LL-37 Truncated Fragments Probed by α-Hemolysin Pore and Molecular Simulations.

Liu. Chang C; Henning-Knechtel. Anja A; Österlund. Nicklas N; Wu. Jinming J; Wang. Guangshun G; Gräslund. Ruth Astrid Olivia RAO; Kirmizialtin. Serdal S; Luo. Jinghui J

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 truncated fragments can form detectable oligomers using an α‑hemolysin nanopore
  • Nanopore signals, mass‑spectrometry, and MD simulations agree on the stability and size of these oligomers
  • Molecular dynamics reveal the detailed motions and interactions that drive oligomer formation

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings help researchers understand how LL‑37 fragments work at the molecular level, which could guide the design of more effective peptide‑based antimicrobials. For biohackers, there’s no immediate change to supplementation or protocols, but the study highlights the importance of peptide structure for activity.

Summary

Scientists used a tiny hole sensor, mass‑spectrometry, and computer simulations to see how short pieces of the immune peptide LL‑37 stick together. They showed these fragments can form small clusters (oligomers), measured how stable those clusters are, and explained the motions that keep them together. The work is mostly about basic science, not a new supplement or dosage tip.

Abstract

Oligomerization of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) is critical in their effects on pathogens. LL-37 and its truncated fragments are widely investigated regarding their structures, antimicrobial activities, and application, such as developing new antibiotics. Due to the small size and weak intermolecular interactions of LL-37 fragments, it is still elusive to establish the relationship between oligomeric states and antimicrobial activities. Here, an α-hemolysin nanopore, mass spectrometry (MS), and molecular dynamic (MD) simulations are used to characterize the oligomeric states of two LL-37 fragments. Nanopore studies provide evidence of trapping events related to the oligomer formation and provide further details on their stabilities, which are confirmed by MS and MD simulations. Furthermore, simulation results reveal the molecular basis of oligomer dynamics and states of LL-37 fragments. This work provides unique insights into the relationship between the oligomer dynamics of AMPs and their antimicrobial activities at the single-molecule level. The study demonstrates how integrating methods allows deciphering single molecule level understanding from nanopore sensing approaches.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-05-12T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/smll.202206232

Citations

11

References

44