Design of Antimicrobial Peptides: Progress Made with Human Cathelicidin LL-37.
Wang. Guangshun G; Narayana. Jayaram Lakshmaiah JL; Mishra. Biswajit B; Zhang. Yingxia Y; Wang. Fangyu F; Wang. Chunfeng C; Zarena. D D; Lushnikova. Tamara T; Wang. Xiuqing X
Key Findings
- The active antimicrobial core of LL‑37 has been mapped, allowing targeted redesign.
- Engineered variants such as 17BIPHE2 and SAAP‑148 show strong activity against tough pathogens and biofilms.
- Vitamin D supplementation and sunlight exposure can increase endogenous LL‑37 levels.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, boosting vitamin D status and getting safe sun exposure are simple ways to raise LL‑37 and support innate immunity. The engineered peptides look promising for topical or therapeutic use, but they are not yet commercially available, so caution is advised before trying any off‑label formulations.
Summary
The paper reviews how the natural human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can be trimmed and re‑designed into more powerful versions that kill bacteria, fungi, viruses and even cancer cells, and it notes that things like vitamin D and sunlight can boost your body’s own LL‑37 production. While the engineered peptides are still experimental, the review highlights promising candidates and ways to naturally enhance this innate‑immune molecule.
Abstract
The incorporation of the innate immune system into humans is essential for survival and health due to the rapid replication of invading microbes and the delayed action of the adaptive immune system. Antimicrobial peptides are important components of human innate immunity. Over 100 such peptides have been identified in various human tissues. Human cathelicidin LL-37 is best studied, and there has been a growing interest in designing new peptides based on LL-37. This chapter describes the alternative processing of the human cathelicidin precursor, protease digestion, and lab cutting of LL-37. Both a synthetic peptide library and structure-based design are utilized to identify the active regions. Although challenging, the determination of the 3D structure of LL-37 enabled the identification of the core antimicrobial region. The minimal region of LL-37 can be function-dependent. We discuss the design and potential applications of LL-37 into antibacterial, antibiofilm, antiviral, antifungal, immune modulating, and anticancer peptides. LL-37 has been engineered into 17BIPHE2, a stable, selective, and potent antimicrobial, antibiofilm, and anticancer peptide. Both 17BIPHE2 and SAAP-148 can eliminate the ESKAPE pathogens and show topical in vivo antibiofilm efficacy. Also discussed are other application strategies, including peptide formulation, antimicrobial implants, and peptide-inducing factors such as vitamin D and sunlight. Finally, we summarize what we learned from peptide design based on human LL-37.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
10.1007/978-981-13-3588-4_12
108
142