Cathelicidin is a "fire alarm", generating protective NLRP3-dependent airway epithelial cell inflammatory responses during infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
McHugh. Brian J BJ; Wang. Rongling R; Li. Hsin-Ni HN; Beaumont. Paula E PE; Kells. Rebekah R; Stevens. Holly H; Young. Lisa L; Rossi. Adriano G AG; Gray. Robert D RD; Dorin. Julia R JR; Gwyer Findlay. Emily L EL; Brough. David D; Davidson. Donald J DJ
Key Findings
- Infected airway cells take up LL‑37 only when they interact with live P. aeruginosa, not needing the bacteria’s T3SS.
- Internalized LL‑37 provides a second signal that activates the NLRP3 inflammasome, leading to caspase‑1 activation and release of IL‑1β and IL‑18.
- The inflammasome response causes caspase‑1‑dependent death of compromised epithelial cells and promotes neutrophil chemotaxis, enhancing bacterial clearance.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the work suggests LL‑37 could be explored as an innate‑immune booster against resistant lung infections, but it is still early‑stage mechanistic research. No dosing guidelines or safety data for oral or inhaled use are provided, so any self‑experiment would be speculative and potentially risky. The main actionable insight is that enhancing LL‑37 levels (e.g., via vitamin D or other natural inducers) might support airway immunity, but more applied studies are needed before concrete protocols can be recommended.
Summary
The study shows that the natural peptide LL‑37 can get inside lung cells infected with the tough bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa and then act like a fire alarm, turning on an immune alarm system (the NLRP3 inflammasome). This triggers the release of inflammatory signals (IL‑1β, IL‑18), kills the infected cells in a controlled way, and calls in neutrophils to help clear the infection.
Abstract
Pulmonary infections are a major global cause of morbidity, exacerbated by an increasing threat from antibiotic-resistant pathogens. In this context, therapeutic interventions aimed at protectively modulating host responses, to enhance defence against infection, take on ever greater significance. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an important multidrug-resistant, opportunistic respiratory pathogen, the clearance of which can be enhanced in vivo by the innate immune modulatory properties of antimicrobial host defence peptides from the cathelicidin family, including human LL-37. Initially described primarily as bactericidal agents, cathelicidins are now recognised as multifunctional antimicrobial immunomodulators, modifying host responses to pathogens, but the key mechanisms involved in these protective functions are not yet defined. We demonstrate that P. aeruginosa infection of airway epithelial cells promotes extensive infected cell internalisation of LL-37, in a manner that is dependent upon epithelial cell interaction with live bacteria, but does not require bacterial Type 3 Secretion System (T3SS). Internalised LL-37 acts as a second signal to induce inflammasome activation in airway epithelial cells, which, in contrast to myeloid cells, are relatively unresponsive to P. aeruginosa. We demonstrate that this is mechanistically dependent upon cathepsin B release, and NLRP3-dependent activation of caspase 1. These result in LL-37-mediated release of IL-1β and IL-18 in a manner that is synergistic with P. aeruginosa infection, and can induce caspase 1-dependent death of infected epithelial cells, and promote neutrophil chemotaxis. We propose that cathelicidin can therefore act as a second signal, required by P. aeruginosa infected epithelial cells to promote an inflammasome-mediated altruistic cell death of infection-compromised epithelial cells and act as a "fire alarm" to enhance rapid escalation of protective inflammatory responses to an uncontrolled infection. Understanding this novel modulatory role for cathelicidins, has the potential to inform development of novel therapeutic strategies to antibiotic-resistant pathogens, harnessing innate immunity as a complementation or alternative to current interventions.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-04-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.ppat.1007694
39
65