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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2015 pubmed 31 citations

Antimicrobial peptide LL-37 promotes antigen-specific immune responses in mice by enhancing Th17-skewed mucosal and systemic immunities.

Kim. Sae-Hae SH; Yang. In-Young IY; Kim. Ju J; Lee. Kyung-Yeol KY; Jang. Yong-Suk YS

Key Findings

  • Oral LL‑37‑linked antigens change the gut’s normally tolerant environment into one that produces IL‑6 and Th17 cells
  • LL‑37 binds to a receptor on M cells, helping the antigen cross the gut lining
  • Mice given LL‑37‑conjugated antigens develop stronger systemic and mucosal immune responses

Practical Outcomes

  • For now, the findings are mainly of scientific interest and not a ready‑to‑use protocol for biohackers. They suggest that future oral vaccines or immune‑boosting supplements might incorporate LL‑37, but more research on safety, dosing, and human effects is needed before anyone should try it themselves.

Summary

The study shows that the human peptide LL‑37, when attached to an antigen and taken by mouth, can boost the body’s immune response by shifting gut immune cells toward a more active, inflammation‑prone state (Th17). It does this by helping the antigen get into special gut cells (M cells) and by increasing certain immune‑signaling molecules. While this points to LL‑37’s potential as a new kind of oral vaccine booster, the work is still in mice and doesn’t give dosing or safety info for people.

Abstract

The human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 is known to have chemotactic and modulatory activities on various cells including monocytes, T cells, and epithelial cells. Given that LL-37 enhances chemotactic attraction and modulates the activity of DCs, it is conceivable that it might play a role as an immune adjuvant by skewing the immune environment toward immunostimulatory conditions. In this study, we characterized the mucosal adjuvant activity of LL-37 using model and pathogenic Ags. When LL-37-conjugated Ag was administered orally to mice, a tolerogenic Peyer's patch environment was altered to cell populations containing IL-6-secreting CD11c(+), CD11c(+) CD70(+), and Th17 cells capable of evoking a subsequent LL-37-conjugated Ag-specific immune response in both systemic and mucosal immune compartments. In addition, we showed presentation of formyl peptide receptor, an LL-37 receptor, on M cells, which may aid the initiation of an LL-37-mediated enhanced immune response through targeting and transcytosis of the conjugated Ag. Based on our findings, we conclude that LL-37 has potential as an oral mucosal adjuvant, not only by enhancing the delivery of LL-37-conjugated Ag to M cells, but also by triggering T-cell-mediated Ag-specific immune responses through modulation of the mucosal immune environment.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2015

Date

2015-04-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/eji.201444988

Citations

31

References

33