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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2020 pubmed 5 citations

Citrullination-Resistant LL-37 Is a Potent Antimicrobial Agent in the Inflammatory Environment High in Arginine Deiminase Activity.

Bryzek. Danuta D; Golda. Anna A; Budziaszek. Joanna J; Kowalczyk. Dominik D; Wong. Alicia A; Bielecka. Ewa E; Shakamuri. Priyanka P; Svoboda. Pavel P; Pohl. Jan J; Potempa. Jan J; Koziel. Joanna J

Key Findings

  • Citrullination by PAD2/4 reduces the antimicrobial and immune‑modulating effects of native LL‑37.
  • Replacing arginine with homoarginine creates a citrullination‑resistant LL‑37 (hArg‑LL‑37).
  • hArg‑LL‑37 keeps its bactericidal and immunomodulatory activity even in the presence of PAD4 or NETs, with similar protease stability to native LL‑37.

Practical Outcomes

  • This isn’t a ready‑to‑use supplement, but it shows a path toward more effective peptide‑based anti‑infection agents that work during intense inflammation. Biohackers should note the potential for future LL‑37‑derived products that could be more reliable in inflammatory conditions, though no dosing or safety data are available yet.

Summary

Researchers made a version of the natural immune peptide LL‑37 that can’t be changed by the body’s PAD enzymes during inflammation. This new version, called hArg‑LL‑37, kills bacteria just as well as the original and still helps control inflammation, even when PAD enzymes are active. It breaks down at the same rate as the normal peptide, so it’s stable enough for potential therapeutic use.

Abstract

LL-37, the only member of the mammalian cathelicidin in humans, plays an essential role in innate immunity by killing pathogens and regulating the inflammatory response. However, at an inflammatory focus, arginine residues in LL-37 can be converted to citrulline via a reaction catalyzed by peptidyl-arginine deiminases (PAD2 and PAD4), which are expressed in neutrophils and are highly active during the formation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Citrullination impairs the bactericidal activity of LL-37 and abrogates its immunomodulatory functions. Therefore, we hypothesized that citrullination-resistant LL-37 variants would retain the functionality of the native peptide in the presence of PADs. To test this hypothesis, we synthetized LL-37 in which arginine residues were substituted by homoarginine (hArg-LL-37). Bactericidal activity of hArg-LL-37 was comparable with that of native LL-37, but neither treatment with PAD4 nor exposure to NETs affected the antibacterial and immunomodulatory activities of hArg-LL-37. Importantly, the susceptibilities of LL-37 and hArg-LL-37 to degradation by proteases did not significantly differ. Collectively, we demonstrated that citrullination-resistant hArg-LL-37 is an attractive lead compound for the generation of new agents to treat bacterial infections and other inflammatory diseases associated with enhanced PAD activity. Moreover, our results provide a proof-of-concept for synthesis of therapeutic peptides using homoarginine.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

Date

2020-11-30T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/ijms21239126

Citations

5

References

35