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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 4
2019 pubmed 11 citations

Eradication of meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus from human skin by the novel LL-37-derived peptide P10 in four pharmaceutical ointments.

Nibbering. Peter H PH; Göblyös. Anikó A; Adriaans. Alwin E AE; Cordfunke. Robert A RA; Ravensbergen. Bep B; Rietveld. Marion H MH; Zwart. Sarah S; Commandeur. Suzan S; van Leeuwen. Remko R; Haisma. Elisabeth M EM; Schimmel. Kirsten J M KJM; den Hartigh. Jan J; Drijfhout. Jan Wouter JW; Ghalbzouri. Abdoelwaheb El AE

Key Findings

  • P10 is chemically stable and retains antibacterial activity in hypromellose gel and Softisan cream, but not in Cetomacrogol cream.
  • In human epidermal models, P10 in hypromellose gel reduced MRSA counts more effectively than in other ointments or saline.
  • P10 showed no adverse effects on skin models, and its antibacterial effect was dose‑dependent both on cultured skin and ex‑vivo human skin.

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY skin‑care or wound‑care experiments, formulating P10 in a hypromellose gel base appears to be the most promising way to target MRSA on the skin. Users would need to obtain the peptide and mix it into a suitable gel, starting with low concentrations and monitoring for any irritation. This approach is still experimental and not yet approved for clinical use, so caution and further testing are advised.

Summary

Researchers made a new peptide called P10 (based on the natural LL‑37) and tested it in four different ointment bases. They found that P10 stays stable and kills MRSA bacteria best when mixed into a hypromellose gel, while it works less well or not at all in the other creams. The peptide didn’t harm skin cells in the lab, and higher doses cleared more bacteria.

Abstract

Skin bacterial colonization/infection is a frequent cause of morbidity in patients with chronic wounds and allergic/inflammatory skin diseases. This study aimed to develop a novel approach to eradicate meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) from human skin. To achieve this, the stability and antibacterial activity of the novel LL-37-derived peptide P10 in four ointments was compared. Results indicate that P10 is chemically stable and antibacterial in hypromellose gel and Softisan-containing cream, but not in Cetomacrogol cream (with or without Vaseline), at 4 <sup>&#xb0;</sup>C for 16 months. Reduction in MRSA counts on Leiden human epidermal models (LEMs) by P10 in hypromellose gel was greater than that of the peptide in Cetomacrogol cream or phosphate buffered saline. P10 did not show adverse effects on LEMs irrespective of the ointment used, while Cetomacrogol with Vaseline and Softisan cream, but not hypromellose gel or Cetomacrogol cream, destroyed MRSA-colonized LEMs. Taking all this into account, P10 in hypromellose gel dose-dependently reduced MRSA colonizing the stratum corneum of the epidermis as well as biofilms of this bacterial strain on LEMs. Moreover, P10 dose-dependently reduced MRSA counts on ex-vivo human skin, with P10 in hypromellose gel being more effective than P10 in Cetomacrogol and Softisan creams. P10 in hypromellose gel is a strong candidate for eradication of MRSA from human skin.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-07-26T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ijantimicag.2019.07.014

Citations

11

References

25