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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2023 pubmed 2 citations

Association of circulating serum free bioavailable and total vitamin D with cathelicidin levels among active TB patients and household contacts.

Acen. Ester Lilian EL; Worodria. William W; Kateete. David Patrick DP; Olum. Ronald R; Joloba. Moses L ML; Akintola. Ashraf A; Bbuye. Mudarshiru M; Andia. Irene Biraro IB

Key Findings

  • Measured bioavailable (free) and total vitamin D alongside LL‑37 in TB patients and contacts
  • Average bioavailable vitamin D was about 3.8 ng/mL and total vitamin D about 19 ng/mL
  • Both free and total vitamin D showed only weak correlations with LL‑37 levels, contrary to the hypothesis

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this means simply taking more vitamin D isn’t a proven way to raise LL‑37 for better immunity against TB. There’s no actionable dosing guidance from this study, and more research is needed before changing supplementation strategies.

Summary

The study looked at whether the amount of free vitamin D in the blood predicts levels of the immune peptide LL‑37 in people with active TB, latent TB, or no TB. They found only a weak link, meaning higher vitamin D didn’t reliably boost LL‑37 as hoped.

Abstract

The free hormone hypothesis postulates that the estimation of free circulating 25 (OH)D may be a better marker of vitamin D status and is of clinical importance compared to total vitamin D fraction. The unbound fraction is involved in biological activities since it is able to penetrate into the cell. Studies have shown that cathelicidin/LL-37 inhibits the growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a vitamin D-dependent manner and therefore adequate vitamin D is required for its expression. The study aimed to determine the association between serum bioavailable and total vitamin D with LL-37 levels in ATB patients, LTBI, and individuals with no TB infection. This was a cross-sectional study in which bioavailable vitamin D and LL-37 levels were measured using competitive ELISA kits and total vitamin D was measured using electrochemilumiscence and consequently determined their association. The mean (SD) bioavailable vitamin D levels of the study participants were 3.8 ng/mL (2.6) and the median (IQR) of LL-37 levels were 320 ng/mL (160, 550 ng/mL). The mean (SD) of total vitamin D levels was 19.0 ng/mL (8.3) ng/mL. Similar weak correlations were observed between the bioavailable and total vitamin D with LL-37 levels, therefore, deviating from our hypothesis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-04-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41598-023-32543-2

Citations

2

References

50