Human cathelicidin, LL-37, inhibits respiratory syncytial virus infection in polarized airway epithelial cells.
Harcourt. Jennifer L JL; McDonald. Melissa M; Svoboda. Pavel P; Pohl. Jan J; Tatti. Kathleen K; Haynes. Lia M LM
Key Findings
- LL‑37 pre‑incubated with RSV dramatically lowered viral genome levels in a realistic airway cell model
- LL‑37 also cut down infection‑related chemokine signals when used prophylactically
- Giving LL‑37 after cells were already infected (24 h or 3 days later) had little effect
Practical Outcomes
- For now, the finding is mostly a proof‑of‑concept. Biohackers could watch for future trials of LL‑37 nasal sprays or lozenges for RSV prevention, but there’s no safe, tested protocol to follow today. If you do experiment, you’d need a pure peptide, proper dosing studies, and safety monitoring, which are currently lacking.
Summary
The study shows that the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can block RSV (a common cold‑like virus) from infecting airway cells when it’s mixed with the virus before exposure, but it doesn’t work well after infection has started. This suggests LL‑37 might be useful as a preventive spray or rinse, though more research is needed before anyone should try it.
Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a major cause of severe lower respiratory tract illness in young children worldwide. Treatment options for severe RSV disease remain limited and the development of therapeutic treatment strategies remains a priority. LL-37, a small cationic host defense peptide involved in anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial responses, reduces replication of or infection by multiple viruses, including influenza virus, in vitro, and protects against lethal challenge with influenza virus in vivo. LL-37 also protects against RSV infection of HEp-2 cells in vitro; however, HEp-2 are not reflective of polarized airway epithelial cells and respond differently to RSV infection. An air-liquid interface (ALI) Calu-3 model that more closely mimics the human airway epithelium was established. Using this in vitro model, the effectiveness of LL-37 in preventing RSV infection and replication was examined. LL-37, when pre-incubated with virus prior to RSV infection (prophylactic), significantly reduced the level of viral genome detected in infected Calu-3 cells, and decreased chemokine expression associated with RSV infection in vitro. In contrast, therapeutic treatment of RSV-infected ALI Calu-3 at 24 h and 3 days post-infection had minimal impact on RSV infection. Differences in the efficacy of LL-37 at reducing RSV infection under prophylactic and therapeutic conditions may in part be ascribed to differences in the method of peptide exposure. However, the efficacy of LL-37 at reducing RSV infection under prophylactic conditions indicates that further studies examining the efficacy of LL-37 as a small peptide inhibitor of RSV are warranted.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-01-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1186/s13104-015-1836-y
51
35