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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2022 pubmed 15 citations

Human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 contributes to Alzheimer's disease progression.

Chen. Xue X; Deng. Suixin S; Wang. Wenchao W; Castiglione. Stefania S; Duan. Zilei Z; Luo. Lei L; Cianci. Francesca F; Zhang. Xiaoxue X; Xu. Jianglei J; Li. Hao H; Zhao. Jizong J; Kamau. Peter Muiruri PM; Zhang. Zhiye Z; Mwangi. James J; Li. Jiali J; Shu. Yousheng Y; Hu. Xintian X; Mazzanti. Michele M; Lai. Ren R

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 promotes CLIC1 moving to the cell membrane and becoming active
  • Activated CLIC1 causes microglial over‑activation, inflammation, and neuron damage linked to Alzheimer’s
  • Removing CLIC1 or blocking its interaction with LL‑37 reduces Alzheimer‑like pathology in mice and monkeys

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re focused on brain health, be cautious with strategies that markedly boost LL‑37 (e.g., high‑dose vitamin D or other immune‑stimulating supplements) especially if you have AD risk factors. Targeting CLIC1 or its binding to LL‑37 could become a future therapeutic angle, but no direct supplement or dosage advice is available yet.

Summary

The study shows that the natural immune molecule LL‑37 can push a protein called CLIC1 into cell membranes, making brain immune cells over‑active and worsening Alzheimer‑type damage in animal models. This suggests that too much LL‑37, which rises during infections, might speed up Alzheimer’s disease, while blocking its interaction with CLIC1 can protect the brain.

Abstract

As a prime mover in Alzheimer's disease (AD), microglial activation requires membrane translocation, integration, and activation of the metamorphic protein chloride intracellular channel 1 (CLIC1), which is primarily cytoplasmic under physiological conditions. However, the formation and activation mechanisms of functional CLIC1 are unknown. Here, we found that the human antimicrobial peptide (AMP) LL-37 promoted CLIC1 membrane translocation and integration. It also activates CLIC1 to cause microglial hyperactivation, neuroinflammation, and excitotoxicity. In mouse and monkey models, LL-37 caused significant pathological phenotypes linked to AD, including elevated amyloid-β, increased neurofibrillary tangles, enhanced neuronal death and brain atrophy, enlargement of lateral ventricles, and impairment of synaptic plasticity and cognition, while Clic1 knockout and blockade of LL-37-CLIC1 interactions inhibited these phenotypes. Given AD's association with infection and that overloading AMP may exacerbate AD, this study suggests that LL-37, which is up-regulated upon infection, may be a driving force behind AD by acting as an endogenous agonist of CLIC1.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-09-22T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41380-022-01790-6

Citations

15

References

43