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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2022 pubmed 63 citations

Human serum triggers antibiotic tolerance in Staphylococcus aureus.

Ledger. Elizabeth V K EVK; Mesnage. Stéphane S; Edwards. Andrew M AM

Key Findings

  • Serum dramatically increases tolerance of Staphylococcus aureus to daptomycin and several other antibiotics.
  • The host peptide LL‑37 activates the GraRS two‑component system, leading to extra peptidoglycan buildup.
  • An independent rise in membrane cardiolipin is also required for full tolerance; blocking both pathways restores antibiotic susceptibility.

Practical Outcomes

  • For those experimenting with antibiotics or anti‑infection strategies, the study warns that blood components can blunt drug effectiveness, so combining drugs or targeting the bacterial stress responses may be needed. It doesn’t provide a new supplement or dosage to try, but highlights the importance of considering host‑derived factors when designing antimicrobial protocols.

Summary

Human blood serum makes Staph bacteria much less sensitive to antibiotics like daptomycin. The natural peptide LL‑37 in serum triggers a bacterial alarm system that builds extra cell wall and changes membrane fats, both of which protect the bugs. If you block these two changes, the bacteria become as vulnerable as they are in lab broth.

Abstract

Staphylococcus aureus frequently causes infections that are challenging to treat, leading to high rates of persistent and relapsing infection. Here, to understand how the host environment influences treatment outcomes, we study the impact of human serum on staphylococcal antibiotic susceptibility. We show that serum triggers a high degree of tolerance to the lipopeptide antibiotic daptomycin and several other classes of antibiotic. Serum-induced daptomycin tolerance is due to two independent mechanisms. Firstly, the host defence peptide LL-37 induces tolerance by triggering the staphylococcal GraRS two-component system, leading to increased peptidoglycan accumulation. Secondly, GraRS-independent increases in membrane cardiolipin abundance are required for full tolerance. When both mechanisms are blocked, S. aureus incubated in serum is as susceptible to daptomycin as when grown in laboratory media. Our work demonstrates that host factors can significantly modulate antibiotic susceptibility via diverse mechanisms, and combination therapy may provide a way to mitigate this.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-04-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41467-022-29717-3

Citations

63

References

116