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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2017 pubmed 12 citations

LL-37 causes cell death of human nasal epithelial cells, which is inhibited with a synthetic glycosaminoglycan.

Thomas. Andrew J AJ; Pulsipher. Abigail A; Davis. Brock M BM; Alt. Jeremiah A JA

Key Findings

  • LL-37 exposure leads to death of human nasal epithelial cells and mouse macrophages.
  • Cell death is linked to activation of caspase‑1 and caspase‑8 (inflammatory/pyroptotic pathways), not caspase‑3/7 (apoptosis).
  • Pre‑treatment with the synthetic glycosaminoglycan GM‑0111 blocks ATP release, cytokine spikes (IL‑6, IL‑8), and cell death in a dose‑dependent manner.

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re experimenting with LL‑37 for its antimicrobial properties, be aware it can damage airway cells and trigger inflammation. Co‑administering a protective GAG like GM‑0111 (or similar mucosal protectants) may mitigate these harmful effects. This insight is mainly a safety warning rather than a performance‑boosting protocol.

Summary

The immune peptide LL-37 can kill human nasal cells and trigger inflammation, but a lab-made sugar molecule called GM-0111 can stop this damage. The cell death happens through inflammatory pathways, not the usual apoptosis route.

Abstract

LL-37 is an immune peptide that regulates innate and adaptive immune responses in the upper airways. Elevated levels of LL-37 have been linked to cell death and inflammatory diseases, such as chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are polysaccharides that are found on respiratory epithelial cells and serve important roles in mucosal surface repair. Recent findings suggest that a synthetic glycosaminoglycan (GM-0111) can protect against LL-37-induced sinonasal mucosal inflammation and cell death in a murine model of acute RS. Herein, we elucidated the mechanisms by which LL-37 causes sinonasal inflammation and how GM-0111 can prevent these mechanisms. When challenged with LL-37, human nasal epithelial cells (HNEpCs) and mouse macrophages (J774.2) demonstrated increased release of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and interleukin (IL)-6 and -8, as well as cell death and lysis. These cellular responses were all blocked dose-dependently by pre-treatment with GM-0111. We identified that LL-37-induced cell death is associated with caspase-1 and -8 activation, but not activation of caspase-3/7. These responses were again blocked by GM-0111. Our data suggest that LL-37 causes cellular death of HNEpCs and macrophages through the pro-inflammatory necrotic and/or pyroptotic pathways rather than apoptosis, and that a GM-0111 is capable of inhibiting these pro-inflammatory cellular events.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-08-24T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0183542

Citations

12

References

78