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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2018 pubmed 24 citations

Molecular Farming in Barley: Development of a Novel Production Platform to Produce Human Antimicrobial Peptide LL-37.

Holásková. Edita E; Galuszka. Petr P; Mičúchová. Alžbeta A; Šebela. Marek M; Öz. Mehmet Tufan MT; Frébort. Ivo I

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 can be expressed in barley seeds using either an endosperm‑specific or a ubiquitin promoter.
  • The best fusion‑tag strategy gave up to 0.55 mg of LL‑37 per kilogram of grain, and the tags can be removed with enterokinase.
  • Transgenic barley plants remained healthy, fertile, and passed the gene to the next generation, and the plant‑produced LL‑37 was biologically active.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, this isn’t a ready‑to‑use supplement, but it shows that low‑cost, plant‑based production of LL‑37 is feasible. If the method is scaled up, it could eventually lower the price of the peptide for research or therapeutic use.

Summary

Scientists figured out how to grow a human antimicrobial peptide called LL‑37 inside barley seeds. They tried different tag tricks to boost production, chose the best ones, and made several barley lines that safely produce the peptide at low levels (about 0.55 mg per kilogram of grain). The peptide can be released from its tags and still works, showing plants could be a cheap way to make LL‑37.

Abstract

The peptide LL-37, a component of the human innate immune system, represents a promising drug candidate. In particular, the development of low-cost production platform technology is a critical bottleneck in its use in medicine. In the present study, a viable approach for the LL-37 production in transgenic barley is developed. First, comparative analyses of the effects of different fused peptide epitope tags applicable for accumulation and purification on LL-37 production yield are performed using transient expression in tobacco leaves. Following the selection of the most yielding fusion peptide strategies, eight different constructs for the expression of codon optimized chimeric LL-37 genes in transgenic barley plants are created. The expression of individual constructs is driven either by an endosperm-specific promoter of the barley B1 hordein gene or by the maize ubiquitin promoter. The transgenes are stably integrated into the barley genome and inherited in the subsequent generation. All transgenic lines show normal phenotypes and are fertile. LL-37 accumulated in the barley seeds up to 0.55 mg per 1 kg of grain. The fused epitope tags are cleaved off by the use of enterokinase. Furthermore, in planta produced LL-37 including the fused versions is biologically active.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-02-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/biot.201700628

Citations

24

References

42