Antimicrobial peptides of the vaginal innate immunity and their role in the fight against sexually transmitted diseases.
Madanchi. H H; Shoushtari. M M; Kashani. H H HH; Sardari. S S
Key Findings
- Vaginal innate immunity relies on several AMPs such as defensins, lysozyme, lactoferrin, and LL-37.
- LL-37, along with magainin 2 and nisin, shows both antimicrobial and spermicidal activity in the vaginal environment.
- AMPs are being explored as potential new antibiotics to combat antibiotic‑resistant sexually transmitted diseases.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that LL-37 is a promising natural peptide with dual antimicrobial and contraceptive properties, but current research is still at a conceptual stage. No concrete dosage, formulation, or safety data are provided, so it’s not ready for self‑experimentation yet. Keep an eye on future studies that might translate these findings into usable supplements or topical applications.
Summary
The paper reviews antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) that naturally protect the vagina, highlighting LL-37 as one that can kill both microbes and sperm. It explains why these peptides are interesting as new antibiotics, especially against drug‑resistant sexually transmitted infections, but does not give specific dosing or how to use them in everyday health routines.
Abstract
Some antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are produced in the vaginal innate immune system and play an important role in protecting this organ against pathogenic agents. Moreover, sexually transmitted diseases have become a major problem in human societies and are rapidly spreading. The emergence of antibiotic-resistant microbes (superbugs) can pose a major threat to human societies and cause rapid spread of these diseases. Finding new antimicrobial compounds to fight superbugs is therefore essential. It has been shown that AMPs have good potential to become new antibiotics. The most important AMPs in the vaginal innate immune system are defensins, secretory leucocyte protease inhibitors, calprotectin, lysozyme, lactoferrin and elafin, which play an important role in host defence against sexually transmitted infections, modulation of immune responses and anticancer activities. Some AMPs, such as LL-37, magainin 2 and nisin, show both spermicidal and antimicrobial effects in the vagina. In this summary, we will discuss vaginal AMPs and continue to address some of the challenges of using peptides to control pathogens that are effective in sexually transmitted diseases.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-12-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.nmni.2019.100627
39
51