Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2017 pubmed 32 citations

The cathelicidin protein CRAMP is a potential atherosclerosis self-antigen in ApoE(-/-) mice.

Mihailovic. Peter M PM; Lio. Wai Man WM; Yano. Juliana J; Zhao. Xiaoning X; Zhou. Jianchang J; Chyu. Kuang-Yuh KY; Shah. Prediman K PK; Cercek. Bojan B; Dimayuga. Paul C PC

Key Findings

  • Low‑dose CRAMP immunization lowered atherosclerosis in ApoE‑/‑ mice.
  • High‑dose CRAMP immunization increased plaque size and neutrophil infiltration.
  • Dose‑dependent changes were seen in CD8+ T‑cell activity and dendritic‑cell populations.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study hints that tiny amounts of LL‑37‑related peptides might modulate immune responses linked to artery health, but the work is limited to a specific mouse model. No human dosing or safety data exist, so there’s no ready‑to‑use protocol. Until translational research confirms similar effects in people, the finding is mainly an interesting mechanistic clue rather than a direct actionable strategy.

Summary

In mice that are prone to artery plaque buildup, a short piece of the natural antimicrobial protein CRAMP (the mouse version of human LL‑37) can act like a self‑antigen. Giving a low dose of this peptide reduced plaque formation, while a high dose made plaques worse and attracted more immune cells.

Abstract

Auto-immunity is believed to contribute to inflammation in atherosclerosis. The antimicrobial peptide LL-37, a fragment of the cathelicidin protein precursor hCAP18, was previously identified as an autoantigen in psoriasis. Given the reported link between psoriasis and coronary artery disease, the biological relevance of the autoantigen to atherosclerosis was tested in vitro using a truncated (t) form of the mouse homolog of hCAP18, CRAMP, on splenocytes from athero-prone ApoE(-/-) mice. Stimulation with tCRAMP resulted in increased CD8+ T cells with Central Memory and Effector Memory phenotypes in ApoE(-/-) mice, differentially activated by feeding with normal chow or high fat diet. Immunization of ApoE(-/-) with different doses of the shortened peptide (Cramp) resulted in differential outcomes with a lower dose reducing atherosclerosis whereas a higher dose exacerbating the disease with increased neutrophil infiltration of the atherosclerotic plaques. Low dose Cramp immunization also resulted in increased splenic CD8+ T cell degranulation and reduced CD11b+CD11c+ conventional dendritic cells (cDCs), whereas high dose increased CD11b+CD11c+ cDCs. Our results identified CRAMP, the mouse homolog of hCAP-18, as a potential self-antigen involved in the immune response to atherosclerosis in the ApoE(-/-) mouse model.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0187432

Citations

32

References

51