Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2020 pubmed

A highly efficient hybrid peptide ameliorates intestinal inflammation and mucosal barrier damage by neutralizing lipopolysaccharides and antagonizing the lipopolysaccharide-receptor interaction.

Wei. Xubiao X; Zhang. Lulu L; Zhang. Rijun R; Wu. Rujuan R; Si. Dayong D; Ahmad. Baseer B; Petitte. James N JN; Mozdziak. Paul E PE; Li. Zhongxuan Z; Guo. Henan H; Zhang. Manyi M

Key Findings

  • The hybrid C‑L peptide is less toxic than its parent peptides Cecropin A and LL‑37.
  • C‑L strongly reduces LPS‑induced inflammation in macrophage cells and mouse intestines.
  • It protects gut barrier integrity, lowers cytokine levels (TNF‑α, IL‑6, IL‑1β, IFN‑γ) and reduces cell death.
  • Its anti‑inflammatory action comes from neutralizing LPS and blocking TLR4/MD2 signaling.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study suggests that combining peptide fragments can yield safer, more potent anti‑inflammatory agents, especially for gut health. However, the work is still in mice, with no human dosing or delivery method established, so it’s not ready for direct supplementation. Keep an eye on future trials that might translate this hybrid peptide into a usable product for reducing gut inflammation or supporting barrier health.

Summary

Scientists created a new short protein (C‑L peptide) that mixes parts of two natural peptides, making it less toxic and better at calming gut inflammation caused by bacterial toxins. In mouse cells and live mice it lowered harmful inflammation signals, protected the gut lining, and prevented weight loss, mainly by binding and neutralizing the toxin LPS and blocking its receptor. It’s still early‑stage research, but shows a promising way to make safer, more effective anti‑inflammatory peptides.

Abstract

Intestinal inflammatory disorders, such as inflammatory bowel disease, are major contributors to mortality and morbidity in humans and animals worldwide. While some native peptides have great potential as therapeutic agents against intestinal inflammation, potential cytotoxicity, anti-inciting action, and suppression of anti-inflammatory activity may limit their development as anti-inflammatory agents. Peptide hybridization is an effective approach for the design and engineering of novel functional peptides because hybrid peptides combine the advantages and benefits of various native peptides. In the present study, a novel hybrid anti-inflammatory peptide that combines the active center of Cecropin A (C) and the core functional region of LL-37 (L) was designed [C-L peptide; C (1-8)-L (17-30)] through in silico analysis to reduce cytotoxicity and improve the anti-inflammatory activity of the parental peptides. The resulting C-L peptide exhibited lower cytotoxicity than either C or L peptides alone. C-L also exerted a protective effect against lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced inflammatory responses in RAW264.7 macrophages and in the intestines of a mouse model. The hybrid peptide exhibited increased anti-inflammatory activity compared to the parental peptides. C-L plays a role in protecting intestinal tissue from damage, LPS-induced weight loss, and leukocyte infiltration. In addition, C-L reduces the expression levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-1β, and interferon-gamma (IFN-γ), as well as reduces cell apoptosis. It also reduced mucosal barrier damage caused by LPS. The anti-inflammatory effects of the hybrid peptide were mainly attributed to its LPS-neutralizing activity and antagonizing the activation of LPS-induced Toll-like receptor 4-myeloid differentiation factor 2 (TLR4/MD2). The peptide also affected the TLR4-(nuclear factor κB) signaling pathway, modulating the inflammatory response upon LPS stimulation. Collectively, these findings suggest that the newly designed peptide, C-L, could be developed into a novel anti-inflammatory agent for animals or humans.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

Date

2020-10-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1096/fj.201903263rrr