LL-37 and Double-Stranded RNA Synergistically Upregulate Bronchial Epithelial TLR3 Involving Enhanced Import of Double-Stranded RNA and Downstream TLR3 Signaling.
Bodahl. Sara S; Cerps. Samuel S; Uller. Lena L; Nilsson. Bengt-Olof BO
Key Findings
- LL‑37 enhances poly I:C‑induced TLR3 mRNA and protein levels in bronchial cells
- LL‑37 increases cellular uptake of poly I:C
- The up‑regulation is blocked by chloroquine (endosomal acidification inhibitor) and reduced by dexamethasone via NF‑κB inhibition
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this research is mainly mechanistic and doesn’t translate into a usable protocol. It suggests that LL‑37 could influence immune signaling during viral‑like challenges, but without human data or dosing guidance, it offers little actionable insight for longevity or performance optimization.
Summary
The study shows that the natural peptide LL‑37 can make lung cells take up more synthetic double‑stranded RNA and increase the amount of a virus‑detecting receptor (TLR3). This effect depends on the cell’s internal pathways and can be blocked by certain drugs like chloroquine or dexamethasone. The work is done in cell cultures, not in people, so it doesn’t give direct advice for health‑hacking or dosing.
Abstract
The human host defense peptide LL-37 influences double-stranded RNA signaling, but this process is not well understood. Here, we investigate synergistic actions of LL-37 and synthetic double-stranded RNA (poly I:C) on toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) expression and signaling, and examine underlying mechanisms. In bronchial epithelial BEAS-2B cells, LL-37 potentiated poly I:C-induced TLR3 mRNA and protein expression demonstrated by qPCR and Western blot, respectively. Interestingly, these effects were associated with increased uptake of rhodamine-tagged poly I:C visualized by immunocytochemistry. The LL-37/poly I:C-induced upregulation of TLR3 mRNA expression was prevented by the endosomal acidification inhibitor chloroquine, indicating involvement of downstream TLR3 signaling. The glucocorticoid dexamethasone reduced LL-37/poly I:C-induced TLR3 expression on both mRNA and protein levels, and this effect was associated with increased IκBα protein expression, suggesting that dexamethasone acts via attenuation of NF-κB activity. We conclude that LL-37 potentiates poly I:C-induced upregulation of TLR3 through a mechanism that may involve enhanced import of poly I:C and that LL-37/poly I:C-induced TLR3 expression is associated with downstream TLR3 signaling and sensitive to inhibition of NF-κB activity.
Study Information
pubmed
2022
2022-02-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/biomedicines10020492
6
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