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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 4
2022 pubmed 26 citations

A stable cyclized antimicrobial peptide derived from LL-37 with host immunomodulatory effects and activity against uropathogens.

White. John Kerr JK; Muhammad. Taj T; Alsheim. Emelie E; Mohanty. Soumitra S; Blasi-Romero. Anna A; Gunasekera. Sunithi S; Strömstedt. Adam A AA; Ferraz. Natalia N; Göransson. Ulf U; Brauner. Annelie A

Key Findings

  • CD4‑PP kills E. coli, K. pneumoniae and P. aeruginosa at low micromolar concentrations with minimal toxicity to human cells
  • It prevents new biofilm formation and dissolves existing biofilms, targeting curli amyloid in E. coli
  • The peptide boosts host LL‑37 production and tight‑junction proteins, and catheter coating with CD4‑PP reduces bacterial attachment

Practical Outcomes

  • If you can obtain CD4‑PP, it could be applied topically or as a catheter coating to lower UTI risk. Early treatment (within a few hours of infection) works well for most uropathogens, though P. aeruginosa is harder to clear once biofilm starts. The low‑dose, low‑toxicity profile makes it a promising candidate for self‑experimentation, but availability and formulation need to be addressed.

Summary

A new synthetic version of the natural peptide LL‑37, called CD4‑PP, can kill the main bacteria that cause urinary‑tract infections at very low doses without hurting human cells. It also stops these bugs from forming sticky biofilms and can even break down biofilms that are already there. In addition, it nudges bladder cells to make more of their own LL‑37 and tightens the cell barrier, and coating catheters with the peptide reduces bacterial sticking.

Abstract

The increasing antibiotic resistance among uropathogenic bacteria warrants alternative therapeutic strategies. We demonstrate the potential of the synthetic peptide CD4-PP, designed by dimerization and backbone cyclization of the shortest antimicrobial region of human cathelicidin, LL-37. CD4-PP is active against clinical and type strains of common uropathogens Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa at concentrations substantially below cellular cytotoxic levels and induced membrane deformation and leakage in E. coli and P. aeruginosa. Furthermore, CD4-PP treatment prevented the formation of new biofilm and dissolved mature biofilm created by E. coli and P. aeruginosa and targeted curli amyloid in E. coli biofilms. In addition, CD4-PP also induced production of LL-37 by uroepithelial cells and increased the expression of tight junction proteins claudin-14 and occludin. During uroepithelial cell infection, CD4-PP significantly reduced uropathogen survival when treatment was given at the start of infection. Low micromolar of CD4-PP treatment initiated after 2 h was successful with all tested species, except P. aeruginosa where CD4-PP was unable to reduce survival, which could be attributed by early biofilm formation. Finally, we demonstrated that urinary catheter pieces coated with saline fluid supplemented with CD4-PP reduced the attachment of E. coli, giving it a potential clinical application.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-07-11T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s00018-022-04440-w

Citations

26

References

58