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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2016 pubmed 32 citations

Prostate cancer-derived cathelicidin-related antimicrobial peptide facilitates macrophage differentiation and polarization of immature myeloid progenitors to protumorigenic macrophages.

Cha. Ha-Ram HR; Lee. Joo Hyoung JH; Hensel. Jonathan A JA; Sawant. Anandi B AB; Davis. Brittney H BH; Lee. Carnellia M CM; Deshane. Jessy S JS; Ponnazhagan. Selvarangan S

Key Findings

  • CRAMP/LL‑37 attracts immature myeloid cells to prostate tumors and pushes them to become pro‑tumor M2 macrophages
  • Tumors with CRAMP grow faster; knocking down CRAMP slows tumor growth in mice
  • CRAMP boosts M‑CSF and MCP‑1 production via NF‑κB p65, activating STAT3 to drive the M2 shift

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this suggests that strategies that unintentionally raise LL‑37 levels (e.g., high vitamin D supplementation) might need careful monitoring in cancer‑prone individuals. No direct dosing advice can be given yet, but maintaining a balanced anti‑inflammatory lifestyle and avoiding unnecessary LL‑37‑boosting interventions could be prudent.

Summary

The study shows that the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 (called CRAMP in mice) can actually help prostate tumors grow by pulling in immature immune cells and turning them into tumor‑friendly M2 macrophages. When the peptide is reduced in tumor cells, tumors grow slower, suggesting that high LL‑37 might be a risk factor for cancer progression, at least in this mouse model.

Abstract

A growing body of evidence indicates a positive correlation between expression of human antimicrobial peptide leucin leucin 37 (LL-37) and progression of epithelial cancers, including prostate cancer (PCa). Although the molecular mechanisms for this correlation has not yet been elucidated, the primary function of LL-37 as a chemotactic molecule for innate immune effector cells suggests its possible association in coordinating protumorigenic mechanisms, mediated by tumor-infiltrating immune cells. To investigate protumorigenic role(s) of cathelicidin-related antimicrobial peptide (CRAMP), a murine orthologue of LL-37, the present study compared tumor growth kinetics between mouse PCa cell lines with and without CRAMP expression (TRAMP-C1 and TRAMP-C1(CRAMP-sh) , respectively) in immunocompetent mice. CRAMP-mediated chemotaxis of different innate immune cell types to the tumor microenvironment (TME) was observed in vivo and confirmed by in vitro chemotaxis assay. The role of CRAMP in differentiation and polarization of immature myeloid progenitors (IMPs) to protumorigenic type 2 macrophages (M2) in TME was determined by adoptive transfer of IMPs into mice bearing CRAMP(+) and CRAMP(-) tumors. To differentiate protumorigenic events mediated by tumor-derived CRAMP from host immune cell-derived CRAMP, tumor challenge study was performed in CRAMP-deficient mice. To identify mechanisms of CRAMP function, macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) and monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1) gene expression was analyzed by QRT-PCR and STAT3 signaling was determined by immunoblotting. Significantly delayed tumor growth was observed in wild-type (WT) mice implanted with TRAMP-C1(CRAMP-sh) cells compared to mice implanted with TRAMP-C1 cells. CRAMP(+) TME induced increased number of IMP differentiation into protumorigenic M2 macrophages compared to CRAMP(-) TME, indicating tumor-derived CRAMP facilitates differentiation and polarization of IMPs toward M2. Tumor challenge study in CRAMP deficient mice showed comparable tumor growth kinetics with WT mice, suggesting tumor-derived CRAMP plays a crucial role in PCa progression. In vitro study demonstrated that overexpressed M-CSF and MCP-1 in TRAMP-C1 cells through CRAMP-mediated autocrine signaling, involving p65, regulates IMP-to-M2 differentiation/polarization through STAT3 activation. Altogether, the present study suggests that overexpressed CRAMP in prostate tumor initially chemoattracts IMPs to TME and mediates differentiation and polarization of early myeloid progenitors into protumorigenic M2 macrophages during PCa progression. Thus, selective downregulation of CRAMP in tumor cells in situ may benefit overcoming immunosuppressive mechanisms in PCa.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-02-09T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/pros.23155

Citations

32

References

40