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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2018 pubmed 89 citations

Botulinum toxin blocks mast cells and prevents rosacea like inflammation.

Choi. Jae Eun JE; Werbel. Tyler T; Wang. Zhenping Z; Wu. Chia Chi CC; Yaksh. Tony L TL; Di Nardo. Anna A

Key Findings

  • Botulinum toxin A and B prevent mast cell degranulation in both human and mouse cells.
  • Mast cells express the botulinum toxin receptor Sv2, allowing direct toxin action.
  • In mice, Botox pretreatment markedly reduces LL‑37‑induced skin redness, mast cell activation, and rosacea‑related gene expression.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers dealing with chronic rosacea, periodic Botox injections may offer a targeted way to calm flare‑ups by shutting down mast‑cell driven inflammation. While not a DIY approach, the data support considering Botox as a clinical option for refractory cases and highlight mast‑cell inhibition as a key therapeutic angle.

Summary

The study shows that Botox (onabotulinum toxin A or B) can directly stop mast cells from releasing inflammatory chemicals, which in turn blocks the skin redness and inflammation caused by the peptide LL‑37 in a rosacea model. This suggests Botox could be a useful treatment for stubborn rosacea by targeting the underlying mast‑cell activity.

Abstract

Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin condition whose etiology has been linked to mast cells and the antimicrobial peptide cathelicidin LL-37. Individuals with refractory disease have demonstrated clinical benefit with periodic injections of onabotulinum toxin, but the mechanism of action is unknown. To investigate the molecular mechanism by which botulinum toxin improves rosacea lesions. Primary human and murine mast cells were pretreated with onabotulinum toxin A or B or control. Mast cell degranulation was evaluated by β-hexosaminidase activity. Expression of botulinum toxin receptor Sv2 was measured by qPCR. The presence of SNAP-25 and VAMP2 was established by immunofluorescence. In vivo rosacea model was established by intradermally injecting LL-37 with or without onabotulinum toxin A pretreatment. Mast cell degranulation was assessed in vivo by histologic counts. Rosacea biomarkers were analyzed by qPCR of mouse skin sections. Onabotulinum toxin A and B inhibited compound 48/80-induced degranulation of both human and murine mast cells. Expression of Sv2 was established in mouse mast cells. Onabotulinum toxin A and B increased cleaved SNAP-25 and decreased VAMP2 staining in mast cells respectively. In mice, injection of onabotulinum toxin A significantly reduced LL-37-induced skin erythema, mast cell degranulation, and mRNA expression of rosacea biomarkers. These findings suggest that onabotulinum toxin reduces rosacea-associated skin inflammation by directly inhibiting mast cell degranulation. Periodic applications of onabotulinum toxin may be an effective therapy for refractory rosacea and deserves further study.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-12-28T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.jdermsci.2018.12.004

Citations

89

References

54