The Antimicrobial Peptide Cathelicidin Exerts Immunomodulatory Effects via Scavenger Receptors.
Amagai. Ryo R; Takahashi. Toshiya T; Terui. Hitoshi H; Fujimura. Taku T; Yamasaki. Kenshi K; Aiba. Setsuya S; Asano. Yoshihide Y
Key Findings
- LL‑37 alone increases VEGFA and COX‑2 (PTGS2) expression in skin cells
- The effect is only partly blocked by inhibiting the known LL‑37 receptor FPR2
- Knocking down scavenger receptors SCARB1, OLR1, and AGER greatly reduces LL‑37‑induced VEGFA and COX‑2
- LL‑37 physically associates with scavenger receptors, indicating they mediate its actions
Practical Outcomes
- LL‑37 may boost angiogenesis and inflammation, which could be useful for wound healing but risky for chronic inflammation. Targeting scavenger receptors—or using inactive LL‑37 analogs—might blunt unwanted immune activation. No human dosing guidance is provided, so any self‑experiment should proceed with caution.
Summary
The study shows that the natural peptide LL‑37 can turn on genes that promote blood vessel growth and inflammation, and it does this mainly by binding to a group of proteins called scavenger receptors. Blocking these receptors reduces LL‑37’s effects, suggesting a way to control its activity.
Abstract
An active form of cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide, LL-37, has immunomodulatory and stimulatory effects, though the specific pathways are not clear. The purpose of this study was to identify the cellular pathways by which LL-37 amplifies the inflammation induced by damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs). We performed DNA microarray, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, immunoblotting, and proximity ligation assays using cultured keratinocytes treated with LL-37 and/or the DAMP poly(I:C), a synthetic double-stranded RNA. In contrast to the combination of LL-37 and poly(I:C), LL-37 alone induced genes related to biological metabolic processes such as VEGFA and PTGS2 (COX-2). Inhibition of FPR2, a known receptor for cathelicidin, partially suppressed the induction of VEGFA and PTGS2. Importantly, VEGFA and PTGS2 induced by LL-37 alone were diminished by the knockdown of scavenger receptors including SCARB1 (SR-B1), OLR1 (SR-E1), and AGER (SR-J1). Moreover, LL-37 alone, as well as the combination of LL-37 and poly(I:C), showed proximity to the scavenger receptors, indicating that LL-37 acts via scavenger receptors and intermediates between them and poly(I:C). These results showed that the broad function of cathelicidin is generally dependent on scavenger receptors. Therefore, inhibitors of scavenger receptors or non-functional mock cathelicidin peptides may serve as new anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive agents.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-01-03T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ijms24010875
13
58