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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2018 pubmed 15 citations

Group A <i>Streptococcus</i> Prevents Mast Cell Degranulation to Promote Extracellular Trap Formation.

Clark. Mary M; Kim. Jessica J; Etesami. Neelou N; Shimamoto. Jacqueline J; Whalen. Ryan V RV; Martin. Gary G; Okumura. Cheryl Y M CYM

Key Findings

  • Mast cells do not degranulate in response to Group A Streptococcus, limiting early antibacterial action.
  • LL‑37 released from mast cell granules can puncture and kill the bacteria directly.
  • Mast cell extracellular traps that contain LL‑37 significantly reduce bacterial survival.

Practical Outcomes

  • LL‑37 is confirmed as a potent antimicrobial against Group A Strep, suggesting it could be a useful target for new anti‑infection strategies. However, the paper does not provide dosing, delivery methods, or safety data for using LL‑37 as a supplement, so biohackers would need more research before applying it.

Summary

The study found that mast cells don’t release their granules (which contain the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37) right away when they encounter Group A Strep, but later they form web‑like traps that embed LL‑37 and kill the bacteria. This shows LL‑37 is a strong killer of this bug, but the work is about natural immune cells, not about taking the peptide as a supplement.

Abstract

The resurgence of Group A <i>Streptococcus</i> (GAS) infections in the past two decades has been a rising major public health concern. Due to a large number of GAS infections occurring in the skin, mast cells (MCs), innate immune cells known to localize to the dermis, could play an important role in controlling infection. MCs can exert their antimicrobial activities either early during infection, by degranulation and release of antimicrobial proteases and the cathelicidin-derived antimicrobial peptide LL-37, or by forming antibacterial MC extracellular traps (MCETs) in later stages of infection. We demonstrate that MCs do not directly degranulate in response to GAS, reducing their ability to control bacterial growth in early stages of infection. However, MC granule components are highly cytotoxic to GAS due to the pore-forming activity of LL-37, while MC granule proteases do not significantly affect GAS viability. We therefore confirmed the importance of MCETs by demonstrating their capacity to reduce GAS survival. The data therefore suggests that LL-37 from MC granules become embedded in MCETs, and are the primary effector molecule by which MCs control GAS infection. Our work underscores the importance of a non-traditional immune effector cell, utilizing a non-conventional mechanism, in the defense against an important human pathogen.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-02-27T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3389/fimmu.2018.00327

Citations

15

References

50