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
2015 pubmed

LL-37 immunomodulatory activity during Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in macrophages.

Torres-Juarez. Flor F; Cardenas-Vargas. Albertina A; Montoya-Rosales. Alejandra A; González-Curiel. Irma I; Garcia-Hernandez. Mariana H MH; Enciso-Moreno. Jose A JA; Hancock. Robert E W RE; Rivas-Santiago. Bruno B

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 reduced pro‑inflammatory cytokines TNF‑α and IL‑17 in infected macrophages
  • LL‑37 increased anti‑inflammatory cytokines IL‑10 and TGF‑β

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings hint that LL‑37 might be used to calm excessive inflammation while still allowing the immune system to fight TB, but because the study is limited to cell cultures, there’s no ready‑to‑use protocol for biohackers. More animal and human research is needed before considering supplementation or therapeutic use.

Summary

In lab tests, adding the natural peptide LL‑37 to human immune cells infected with TB bacteria changed the cells' signaling: it lowered some inflammation signals (TNF‑α, IL‑17) and raised anti‑inflammatory signals (IL‑10, TGF‑β) without stopping the cells from fighting the bacteria. This shows LL‑37 can tweak the immune response, but the work was done only in a dish, not in people.

Abstract

Tuberculosis is one of the most important infectious diseases worldwide. The susceptibility to this disease depends to a great extent on the innate immune response against mycobacteria. Host defense peptides (HDP) are one of the first barriers to counteract infection. Cathelicidin (LL-37) is an HDP that has many immunomodulatory effects besides its weak antimicrobial activity. Despite advances in the study of the innate immune response in tuberculosis, the immunological role of LL-37 during M. tuberculosis infection has not been clarified. Monocyte-derived macrophages were infected with M. tuberculosis strain H37Rv and then treated with 1, 5, or 15 μg/ml of exogenous LL-37 for 4, 8, and 24 h. Exogenous LL-37 decreased tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and interleukin-17 (IL-17) while inducing anti-inflammatory IL-10 and transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) production. Interestingly, the decreased production of anti-inflammatory cytokines did not reduce antimycobacterial activity. These results are consistent with the concept that LL-37 can modulate the expression of cytokines during mycobacterial infection and this activity was independent of the P2X7 receptor. Thus, LL-37 modulates the response of macrophages during infection, controlling the expression of proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2015

Date

2015-09-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1128/iai.00936-15