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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2015 pubmed 19 citations

Novel engineered cationic antimicrobial peptides display broad-spectrum activity against Francisella tularensis, Yersinia pestis and Burkholderia pseudomallei.

Abdelbaqi. Suha S; Deslouches. Berthony B; Steckbeck. Jonathan J; Montelaro. Ronald R; Reed. Douglas S DS

Key Findings

  • WLBU2 and WR12 are more bactericidal than LL‑37 against Francisella tularensis and Yersinia pestis
  • WLBU2 uniquely kills Burkholderia pseudomallei, while WR12 does not
  • WLBU2 achieves >50% killing of F. tularensis inside mouse macrophage cells at 12.5 µM

Practical Outcomes

  • These results suggest engineered peptides could become powerful new antibiotics for extreme infections, but they are not yet safe or accessible for personal use. Biohackers should view this as a proof‑of‑concept rather than a ready‑to‑use treatment, and focus on monitoring future developments before considering any self‑experimentation.

Summary

The study shows that engineered antimicrobial peptides (WLBU2 and WR12) kill dangerous bacteria better than the natural human peptide LL‑37, especially against plague‑related bugs, and WLBU2 works inside immune cells at low micromolar levels. However, these peptides are still experimental, not available as supplements, and the work focuses on rare, high‑risk pathogens, so there’s no immediate protocol you can apply today.

Abstract

Broad-spectrum antimicrobials are needed to effectively treat patients infected in the event of a pandemic or intentional release of a pathogen prior to confirmation of the pathogen's identity. Engineered cationic antimicrobial peptides (eCAPs) display activity against a number of bacterial pathogens including multi-drug-resistant strains. Two lead eCAPs, WLBU2 and WR12, were compared with human cathelicidin (LL-37) against three highly pathogenic bacteria: Francisella tularensis, Yersinia pestis and Burkholderia pseudomallei. Both WLBU2 and WR12 demonstrated bactericidal activity greater than that of LL-37, particularly against F. tularensis and Y. pestis. Only WLBU2 had bactericidal activity against B. pseudomallei. WLBU2, WR12 and LL-37 were all able to inhibit the growth of the three bacteria in vitro. Because these bacteria can be facultative intracellular pathogens, preferentially infecting macrophages and dendritic cells, we evaluated the activity of WLBU2 against F. tularensis in an ex vivo infection model with J774 cells, a mouse macrophage cell line. In that model WLBU2 was able to achieve greater than 50% killing of F. tularensis at a concentration of 12.5 μM. These data show the therapeutic potential of eCAPs, particularly WLBU2, as a broad-spectrum antimicrobial for treating highly pathogenic bacterial infections.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2015

Date

2015-12-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1099/jmm.0.000209

Citations

19

References

22