Clarithromycin Enhances the Antibacterial Activity and Wound Healing Capacity in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus by Increasing LL-37 Load on Neutrophil Extracellular Traps.
Arampatzioglou. Athanasios A; Papazoglou. Dimitrios D; Konstantinidis. Theocharis T; Chrysanthopoulou. Akrivi A; Mitsios. Alexandros A; Angelidou. Iliana I; Maroulakou. Ioanna I; Ritis. Konstantinos K; Skendros. Panagiotis P
Key Findings
- Neutrophil NETs from T2D patients contain LL‑37 but normally lack antibacterial activity.
- Clarithromycin boosts the amount of LL‑37 displayed on NETs from well‑controlled T2D patients.
- The LL‑37‑rich NETs regain bacterial killing power and stimulate fibroblast activation, improving wound‑healing in lab tests.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers or self‑experimenters with well‑controlled type‑2 diabetes, adding a short course of clarithromycin could enhance innate immunity and speed up skin wound repair by increasing LL‑37 on NETs. This suggests a potential off‑label protocol, but it requires medical supervision because clarithromycin is a prescription antibiotic with possible side effects and resistance concerns.
Summary
In people with type‑2 diabetes whose blood sugar is under control, the antibiotic clarithromycin makes neutrophils release more of the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 on their DNA webs (NETs). This extra LL‑37 gives the NETs the ability to kill bacteria and also helps skin cells grow and heal wounds faster.
Abstract
<b>Background:</b> Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) is characterized by susceptibility to bacterial infections and impaired wound healing. Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) and the cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide LL-37 have been implicated both in defense against bacterial infections and in wound healing process. Recently, it was shown that macrolide antibiotic clarithromycin induces the release of LL-37-bearing NETs. In T2D there has not been identified any link between NETs and LL-37 and the effect of clarithromycin in neutrophils/NETs is unknown yet. <b>Methods:</b> Peripheral blood neutrophils were obtained from treatment-naive hyperglycemic T2D patients (naive), normoglycemic T2D patients under antidiabetic treatment (well-controlled) and healthy donors (controls). NET release and NET proteins were studied. Co-culture systems of NET structures with <i>E. coli</i> NCTC 9001 and primary skin fibroblasts were deployed to examine the <i>in vitro</i> antibacterial and fibrotic NET properties, respectively. The effect of clarithromycin was also investigated. Analysis was performed using immunofluorescence confocal microscopy, myeloperoxidase-DNA complex and LL-37 ELISA, immunoblotting and qRT-PCR. <b>Results:</b> NETs were characterized by the presence of LL-37, however they lacked antibacterial activity, in both groups of T2D patients. Clarithromycin significantly increased the externalization of LL-37 on NETs generated from well-controlled T2D neutrophils, thus restoring NET antibacterial capacity and promoting the wound healing process via fibroblast activation and differentiation. <b>Conclusion:</b> This study suggests that clarithromycin may add further advantage to well-controlled T2D patients, by enhancing their antibacterial defense and improving wound healing capacity of fibroblasts, through upregulation of LL-37 on NET structures.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-09-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.3389/fimmu.2018.02064
42
44