Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2023 pubmed 12 citations

Regulation of Macrophage Cell Surface GAPDH Alters LL-37 Internalization and Downstream Effects in the Cell.

Dhiman. Asmita A; Talukdar. Sharmila S; Chaubey. Gaurav Kumar GK; Dilawari. Rahul R; Modanwal. Radheshyam R; Chaudhary. Surbhi S; Patidar. Anil A; Boradia. Vishant Mahendra VM; Kumbhar. Pradeep P; Raje. Chaaya Iyengar CI; Raje. Manoj M

Key Findings

  • GAPDH on macrophage surfaces acts as a receptor that binds and internalizes LL‑37
  • LL‑37 entry uses lipid‑raft dependent endocytosis and triggers autophagy via calcium and p38 MAPK
  • Removing GAPDH blocks LL‑37‑induced autophagy and bacterial killing, which is rescued by GAPDH overexpression

Practical Outcomes

  • While the study doesn’t give direct dosing tips, it suggests that supporting GAPDH function or membrane lipid‑raft health could boost LL‑37’s antimicrobial action. Biohackers might explore nutrients or compounds that enhance GAPDH expression or calcium signaling, but any such experiments should be done cautiously and preferably under professional guidance.

Summary

Scientists found that a common protein on the surface of immune cells, GAPDH, grabs the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and pulls it inside the cell, where it triggers a cleaning process (autophagy) that helps kill the tuberculosis bacteria. This internal‑entry needs special cell membrane areas called lipid rafts and relies on calcium and a signaling pathway (p38 MAPK). If GAPDH is missing, LL‑37 can’t do its job, but adding GAPDH back restores the effect.

Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb), the major causative agent of tuberculosis, has evolved mechanisms to evade host defenses and persist within host cells. Host-directed therapies against infected cells are emerging as an effective option. Cationic host defense peptide LL-37 is known to internalize into cells and induce autophagy resulting in intracellular killing of M.tb. This peptide also regulates the immune system and interacts with the multifunctional protein glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) inside macrophages. Our investigations revealed that GAPDH moonlights as a mononuclear cell surface receptor that internalizes LL-37. We confirmed that the surface levels of purinergic receptor 7, the receptor previously reported for this peptide, remained unaltered on M.tb infected macrophages. Upon infection or cellular activation with IFNγ, surface recruited GAPDH bound to and internalized LL-37 into endocytic compartments via a lipid raft-dependent process. We also discovered a role for GAPDH in LL-37-mediated autophagy induction and clearance of intracellular pathogens. In infected macrophages wherein GAPDH had been knocked down, we observed an inhibition of LL-37-mediated autophagy which was rescued by GAPDH overexpression. This process was dependent on intracellular calcium and p38 MAPK pathways. Our findings reveal a previously unknown process by which macrophages internalize an antimicrobial peptide via cell surface GAPDH and suggest a moonlighting role of GAPDH in regulating cellular phenotypic responses of LL-37 resulting in reduction of M.tb burden.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-04-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1159/000530083

Citations

12

References

72