Human Antimicrobial Peptides as Therapeutics for Viral Infections.
Ahmed. Aslaa A; Siman-Tov. Gavriella G; Hall. Grant G; Bhalla. Nishank N; Narayanan. Aarthi A
Key Findings
- LL‑37 and other antimicrobial peptides are among the first defenses activated when a virus enters the body.
- Research shows LL‑37 can directly inhibit several viruses and also modulate immune inflammation.
- These peptides are being considered as a new class of antivirals, especially for emerging viruses without approved drugs.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the takeaway is that boosting natural peptide production (e.g., through vitamin D, which can raise LL‑37 levels) might support antiviral defenses, but there are no proven supplement protocols yet. More clinical studies are needed before LL‑37 can be used as a reliable antiviral therapy.
Summary
The paper reviews how human antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37, which are part of our natural immune response, can also fight viruses such as dengue and Zika. It explains that these peptides are quickly produced during infection and can block viruses and calm inflammation, but it doesn’t give specific dosing or treatment plans.
Abstract
Successful in vivo infection following pathogen entry requires the evasion and subversion of multiple immunological barriers. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are one of the first immune pathways upregulated during infection by multiple pathogens, in multiple organs in vivo. In humans, there are many classes of AMPs exhibiting broad antimicrobial activities, with defensins and the human cathelicidin LL-37 being the best studied examples. Whereas historically the efficacy and therapeutic potential of AMPs against bacterial infection has been the primary focus of research, recent studies have begun to elucidate the antiviral properties of AMPs as well as their role in regulation of inflammation and chemoattraction. AMPs as therapeutic tools seem especially promising against emerging infectious viral pathogens for which no approved vaccines or treatments are currently available, such as dengue virus (DENV) and Zika virus (ZIKV). In this review, we summarize recent studies elucidating the efficacy and diverse mechanisms of action of various classes of AMPs against multiple viral pathogens, as well as the potential use of human AMPs in novel antiviral therapeutic strategies.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-08-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/v11080704
187
170