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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2022 pubmed 15 citations

Oral vitamin D modulates the epidermal expression of the vitamin D receptor and cathelicidin in children with atopic dermatitis.

Cabalín. Carolina C; Pérez-Mateluna. Guillermo G; Iturriaga. Carolina C; Camargo. Carlos A CA; Borzutzky. Arturo A

Key Findings

  • Serum 25‑hydroxyvitamin D roughly doubled after weekly vitamin D3 supplementation
  • Eczema severity (SCORAD) dropped significantly
  • Cathelicidin (LL‑37) gene and protein levels rose in lesional skin, while vitamin D receptor expression also increased

Practical Outcomes

  • Regular vitamin D3 supplementation (e.g., weekly high‑dose or daily moderate dose) can improve skin barrier defenses and reduce eczema symptoms, likely by increasing LL‑37. For biohackers, maintaining 25OHD around 90 nmol/L may be a useful target for skin‑immune support, but individual dosing should consider baseline levels and safety limits.

Summary

Taking vitamin D pills for six weeks raised kids' blood vitamin D levels, cut their eczema severity, and boosted the skin's natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, especially in the rash areas. This shows oral vitamin D can help skin health by turning on the vitamin D receptor and cathelicidin.

Abstract

Although vitamin D (VD) is known to have multiple effects on the skin and immunity, its effects on atopic dermatitis (AD) severity remain unclear. We investigated whether oral cholecalciferol (VD3) supplementation changes stratum corneum expression of the vitamin D receptor (vdr), and the epidermal alarmins Cathelicidin Antimicrobial Peptide (camp/LL-37) and Thymic Stromal Lymphopoietin (tslp) in children with AD. We conducted an open-label supplementation study with weekly oral VD3 for six weeks in children with AD. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD), lesional Staphylococcus aureus colonization, and AD severity evaluated by SCORAD index were evaluated before and after supplementation. Tape stripping (TS) was performed on non-lesional and lesional skin to measure mRNA expression of vdr, camp, and tslp through RT-qPCR and LL-37 peptide by ELISA. Twenty-two children with moderate-severe AD received weekly oral VD3 for six weeks. Total serum 25OHD increased from 45.1 ± 23 to 93.5 ± 24.3 nmoL/L (p < 0.0001), while SCORAD decreased from 41.4 ± 13.5 to 31.5 ± 15.8 (p < 0.0001). After treatment, epidermal gene expression of camp increased significantly in non-lesional (p = 0.014) and lesional (p = 0.0007) tape stripping samples, while vdr only increased in lesional skin samples (p < 0.0001). LL-37 peptide increased significantly only in lesional skin samples (p = 0.008). Gene expression of tslp did not change after oral VD3 treatment. In children with AD, oral VD3 supplementation was associated with improved VD status and AD severity, as well as increased VDR and Cathelicidin expression in lesional skin, which provide mechanistic clues on its effects.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-10-22T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s00403-022-02416-1

Citations

15

References

57