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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2019 pubmed 76 citations

Cathelicidins PMAP-36, LL-37 and CATH-2 are similar peptides with different modes of action.

Scheenstra. Maaike R MR; van den Belt. Matthias M; Tjeerdsma-van Bokhoven. Johanna L M JLM; Schneider. Viktoria A F VAF; Ordonez. Soledad R SR; van Dijk. Albert A; Veldhuizen. Edwin J A EJA; Haagsman. Henk P HP

Key Findings

  • LL‑37, PMAP‑36, and CATH‑2 kill E. coli via distinct mechanisms observed by electron microscopy
  • LL‑37 binds LPS weakly yet most effectively suppresses LPS‑triggered macrophage activation
  • The first 11 amino acids of PMAP‑36 aren’t needed for killing or LPS neutralization, but further deletions reduce activity; short PMAP‑36 analogs require dimerization for immunomodulation

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY health enthusiasts, the data suggest that LL‑37 may be a better candidate for anti‑inflammatory purposes despite its weak LPS binding, and that peptide length and dimerization are critical factors when designing or using modified cathelicidins. However, the work is mechanistic and does not provide dosing or safety guidance for human use.

Summary

The study compares three antimicrobial peptides—human LL‑37, pig PMAP‑36, and chicken CATH‑2—and finds they kill bacteria in different ways and affect the immune system differently. LL‑37 doesn’t stick to bacterial LPS very well but still blocks LPS‑driven inflammation strongly, while PMAP‑36 binds LPS well but is less effective at stopping inflammation. Shortening PMAP‑36 removes some activity, and the smaller versions need to pair up (dimerize) to keep their immune‑modulating effects.

Abstract

Host defense peptides (HDPs) play a pivotal role in innate immunity and have, in addition to antimicrobial activity, also important immunomodulatory functions. Bacteria are less likely to develop resistance against HDPs because these peptides target and kill bacteria in multiple ways, as well as modulate the immune system. Therefore, HDPs, and derivatives thereof, are promising alternatives to traditional antibiotics. Hardly anything is known about the immunomodulatory functions of porcine cathelicidin PMAP-36. In this study, we aimed to determine both antibacterial and immunomodulatory activities of PMAP-36 comparing the properties of PMAP-36 analogs with two well-studied peptides, human LL-37 and chicken CATH-2. Transmission electron microscopy revealed different killing mechanisms of E. coli for PMAP-36, CATH-2 and LL-37. LL-37 binds LPS very weakly in contrast to PMAP-36, but it inhibits LPS activation of macrophages the strongest. The first 11 amino acids of the N-terminal side of PMAP-36 are dispensable for E. coli killing, LPS-neutralization and binding. Deletion of four additional amino acids resulted in a strong decrease in activity. The activity of full length PMAP-36 was not affected by monomerization, whereas the shorter analogs require dimerization for proper immunomodulatory activity but not for their antibacterial activity.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-03-18T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41598-019-41246-6

Citations

76

References

61