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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2018 pubmed 13 citations

Examination of the Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile VanZ ortholog, CD1240.

Woods. Emily C EC; Wetzel. Daniela D; Mukerjee. Monjori M; McBride. Shonna M SM

Key Findings

  • VanZ1 provides low‑level resistance to the antibiotic teicoplanin in C. difficile
  • LL‑37 triggers vanZ1 gene expression but does not affect the bacteria’s susceptibility to LL‑37
  • Removing vanZ1 lowers teicoplanin resistance, and re‑introducing it restores the resistance

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this work doesn’t change how you’d use LL‑37 or teicoplanin. It suggests that LL‑37 isn’t useful against C. difficile and that the bacteria’s teicoplanin resistance is modest, so no new dosing or protocol tweaks are indicated.

Summary

The study looked at a gene called VanZ1 in the gut bug C. difficile. It shows VanZ1 gives the bacteria a small boost against the antibiotic teicoplanin, and the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can turn the gene on, but LL‑37 itself doesn’t help the bacteria survive. Deleting the gene makes the bug a bit more sensitive to teicoplanin, and putting it back restores that resistance.

Abstract

Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile causes severe diarrheal disease that is directly associated with antibiotic use and resistance. Although C.&#xa0;difficile demonstrates intrinsic resistance to many antimicrobials, few genetic mechanisms of resistance have been characterized in this pathogen. In this study, we investigated the putative resistance factor, CD1240 (VanZ1), an ortholog of the teicoplanin resistance factor, VanZ, of Enterococcus faecium. In C.&#xa0;difficile, the vanZ1 gene is located within the skin element of the sporulation factor &#x3c3;<sup>K</sup>, which is excised from the mother cell compartment during sporulation. This unique localization enabled us to create a vanZ1 deletion mutant by inducing excision of the skin element. The &#x394;skin mutant exhibited moderately decreased resistance to teicoplanin and had small effects on growth in some other cell-surface antimicrobials tested. Examination of vanZ1 expression revealed induction of vanZ1 transcription by the antimicrobial peptide LL-37; however, LL-37 resistance was not impacted by VanZ1, and none of the other tested antimicrobials induced vanZ1 expression. Further, expression of vanZ1 via an inducible promoter in the &#x394;skin mutant restored growth in teicoplanin. These results demonstrate that like the E.&#xa0;faecium VanZ, C.&#xa0;difficile VanZ1 contributes to low-level teicoplanin resistance through an undefined mechanism.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-06-22T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.anaerobe.2018.06.013

Citations

13

References

56