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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2023 pubmed 2 citations

A heptadeca amino acid peptide subunit of cathelicidin LL-37 has previously unreported antifungal activity.

Kalimuthu. Shanthini S; Pudipeddi. Akhila A; Braś. Grażyna G; Tanner. Julian A JA; Rapala-Kozik. Maria M; Leung. Yiu Yan YY; Neelakantan. Prasanna P

Key Findings

  • GK‑17 rapidly kills C. albicans planktonic cells in serum, plasma, saliva and urine
  • It blocks adhesion and both prevents and eradicates C. albicans biofilms in the presence of biological fluids
  • GK‑17 shows lower resistance development than nystatin and causes only ~30% hemolysis at four times the fungicidal concentration

Practical Outcomes

  • GK‑17 could be a promising template for new antifungal creams or sprays, especially for skin or mucosal infections. Biohackers interested in DIY peptide synthesis might experiment with GK‑17, but must start with low doses and monitor for irritation or hemolysis, as safety data in humans is still limited.

Summary

Researchers found that a 17‑amino‑acid piece of the human peptide LL‑37, called GK‑17, can quickly kill the fungus Candida albicans even in body fluids like saliva and urine, stops it from sticking to surfaces, breaks down its protective biofilm, and is less likely to cause resistance than standard drugs, though it does cause some red‑blood‑cell damage at high doses.

Abstract

Yeasts such as Candida albicans, albeit being ubiquitous members of the skin, oral and vaginal microbiome, can cause superficial to life-threatening infections. Human cathelicidin LL-37-based peptides have antibacterial activity and yet, their antifungal activity remains to be thoroughly characterized. The aim of this study was to comprehensively investigate the activity of LL-37-based peptides against C. albicans. LL-37 and its derivatives were tested for their ability to kill C. albicans planktonic cells in the presence of various biological matrices (serum, plasma, saliva and urine), that have been reported to inactivate peptides. The antibiofilm activity, resistance development and biocompatibility were investigated for the lead peptide. GK-17, a 17 amino acid peptide, showed remarkable stability to fungal aspartyl proteases and rapidly killed planktonic C. albicans despite the presence of biological matrices. GK-17 also inhibited adhesion to biotic and abiotic substrates, inhibited biofilm formation and eradicated preformed biofilms in the presence of biological matrices. Compared to nystatin, GK-17 had a lower propensity to allow for resistance development by C. albicans. The peptide showed concentration-dependent biocompatibility to red blood cells, with only 30% hemolysis even at 4× the fungicidal concentration. Taken together, GK-17 is a novel antifungal peptide with promising effects against C. albicans.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-05-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/apm.13322

Citations

2

References

50