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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2018 pubmed

Multi-species oral biofilm promotes reconstructed human gingiva epithelial barrier function.

Shang. Lin L; Deng. Dongmei D; Buskermolen. Jeroen Kees JK; Janus. Marleen Marga MM; Krom. Bastiaan Philip BP; Roffel. Sanne S; Waaijman. Taco T; van Loveren. Cor C; Crielaard. Wim W; Gibbs. Susan S

Key Findings

  • Commensal oral biofilm increases gingival epithelial thickness and organized stratification
  • Keratinocyte proliferation rises with biofilm exposure
  • Production of antimicrobial proteins Elafin, HBD2, and HBD3 goes up, while LL‑37 levels stay unchanged

Practical Outcomes

  • Keeping a balanced oral microbiome may enhance gum barrier function, but there’s no actionable guidance for LL‑37 supplementation or dosing from this work.

Summary

The study shows that a natural mix of harmless mouth bacteria can make gum tissue thicker and more protective, boosting some antimicrobial proteins but not the peptide LL‑37. This suggests a healthy oral microbiome helps gum health, but it doesn’t give any new tricks for using LL‑37 itself.

Abstract

Since the oral mucosa is continuously exposed to abundant microbes, one of its most important defense features is a highly proliferative, thick, stratified epithelium. The cellular mechanisms responsible for this are still unknown. The aim of this study was to determine whether multi-species oral biofilm contribute to the extensive stratification and primed antimicrobial defense in epithelium. Two in vitro models were used: 3D reconstructed human gingiva (RHG) and oral bacteria representative of multi-species commensal biofilm. The organotypic RHG consists of a reconstructed stratified gingiva epithelium on a gingiva fibroblast populated hydrogel (lamina propria). Biofilm was cultured from healthy human saliva, and consists of typical commensal genera Granulicatella and major oral microbiota genera Veillonella and Streptococcus. Biofilm was applied topically to RHG and host-microbiome interactions were studied over 7 days. Compared to unexposed RHG, biofilm exposed RHG showed increased epithelial thickness, more organized stratification and increased keratinocyte proliferation. Furthermore biofilm exposure increased production of RHG anti-microbial proteins Elafin, HBD2 and HBD3 but not HBD1, adrenomedullin or cathelicidin LL-37. Inflammatory and antimicrobial cytokine secretion (IL-6, CXCL8, CXCL1, CCL20) showed an immediate and sustained increase. In conclusion, exposure of RHG to commensal oral biofilm actively contributes to RHG epithelial barrier function.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-10-30T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41598-018-34390-y