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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2021 pubmed 12 citations

Colonic epithelial cathelicidin (LL-37) expression intensity is associated with progression of colorectal cancer and presence of CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell infiltrate.

Porter. Ross J RJ; Murray. Graeme I GI; Alnabulsi. Abdo A; Humphries. Matthew P MP; James. Jacqueline A JA; Salto-Tellez. Manuel M; Craig. Stephanie G SG; Wang. Ji M JM; Yoshimura. Teizo T; McLean. Mairi H MH

Key Findings

  • Low LL-37 expression correlates with colorectal cancer progression and early tumor development
  • LL-37 loss is associated with reduced CD8+ T‑cell infiltration in tumors
  • Mice lacking LL-37 develop larger and more numerous colon tumors, suggesting a protective role

Practical Outcomes

  • There’s no ready‑to‑use protocol yet, but the data hint that boosting LL-37 could someday help prevent or treat colorectal cancer. Enthusiasts should monitor emerging ways to raise LL-37 levels, while recognizing that current evidence is still pre‑clinical.

Summary

Researchers found that lower levels of the natural peptide LL-37 in colon cells are linked to more advanced colorectal cancer and fewer CD8+ T‑cells, while mice without LL-37 develop larger tumors. In human tumor samples, loss of LL-37 appears early and is tied to tumor characteristics, but it didn’t affect gut barrier genes.

Abstract

Colorectal cancer (CRC) remains a leading cause of cancer mortality. Here, we define the colonic epithelial expression of cathelicidin (LL-37) in CRC. Cathelicidin exerts pleotropic effects including anti-microbial and immunoregulatory functions. Genetic knockout of cathelicidin led to increased size and number of colorectal tumours in the azoxymethane-induced murine model of CRC. We aimed to translate this to human disease. The expression of LL-37 in a large (n&#xa0;=&#x2009;650) fully characterised cohort of treatment-na&#xef;ve primary human colorectal tumours and 50 matched normal mucosa samples with associated clinical and pathological data (patient age, gender, tumour site, tumour stage [UICC], presence or absence of extra-mural vascular invasion, tumour differentiation, mismatch repair protein status, and survival to 18&#x2009;years) was assessed by immunohistochemistry. The biological consequences of LL-37 expression on the epithelial barrier and immune cell phenotype were assessed using targeted quantitative PCR gene expression of epithelial permeability (CLDN2, CLDN4, OCLN, CDH1, and TJP1) and cytokine (IL-1&#x3b2;, IL-18, IL-33, IL-10, IL-22, and IL-27) genes in a human colon organoid model, and CD3<sup>+</sup> , CD4<sup>+</sup> , and CD8<sup>+</sup> lymphocyte phenotyping by immunohistochemistry, respectively. Our data reveal that loss of cathelicidin is associated with human CRC progression, with a switch in expression intensity an early feature of CRC. LL-37 expression intensity is associated with CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell infiltrate, influenced by tumour characteristics including mismatch repair protein status. There was no effect on epithelial barrier gene expression. These data offer novel insights into the contribution of LL-37 to the pathogenesis of CRC and as a therapeutic molecule.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-05-14T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/cjp2.222

Citations

12

References

40