The human cathelicidin LL-37--A pore-forming antibacterial peptide and host-cell modulator.
Xhindoli. Daniela D; Pacor. Sabrina S; Benincasa. Monica M; Scocchi. Marco M; Gennaro. Renato R; Tossi. Alessandro A
Key Findings
- LL-37 has broad antimicrobial activity by forming pores in bacterial membranes
- alarmin
- Its ability to oligomerize influences both its antimicrobial and host‑cell effects
Practical Outcomes
- At this stage LL-37 is mainly a research molecule, not a ready‑to‑use supplement. Biohackers should view it as a concept for future therapies rather than a protocol to try now, and any self‑experimentation would lack safety and dosage guidance.
Summary
LL-37 is a natural human peptide that can kill microbes, signal the immune system, help heal wounds, and affect blood vessel growth, all thanks to its simple helix shape that can form pores in cell membranes. The paper explains how its structure and tendency to clump together drive these effects, but it doesn’t give dosing advice or direct ways to use it as a supplement.
Abstract
The human cathelicidin hCAP18/LL-37 has become a paradigm for the pleiotropic roles of peptides in host defence. It has a remarkably wide functional repertoire that includes direct antimicrobial activities against various types of microorganisms, the role of 'alarmin' that helps to orchestrate the immune response to infection, the capacity to locally modulate inflammation both enhancing it to aid in combating infection and limiting it to prevent damage to infected tissues, the promotion of angiogenesis and wound healing, and possibly also the elimination of abnormal cells. LL-37 manages to carry out all its reported activities with a small and simple, amphipathic, helical structure. In this review we consider how different aspects of its primary and secondary structures, as well as its marked tendency to form oligomers under physiological solution conditions and then bind to molecular surfaces as such, explain some of its cytotoxic and immunomodulatory effects. We consider its modes of interaction with bacterial membranes and capacity to act as a pore-forming toxin directed by our organism against bacterial cells, contrasting this with the mode of action of related peptides from other species. We also consider its different membrane-dependent effects on our own cells, which underlie many of its other activities in host defence. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Pore-Forming Toxins edited by Mauro Dalla Serra and Franco Gambale.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-11-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbamem.2015.11.003
312
258