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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2015 pubmed 47 citations

Chlamydia-secreted protease CPAF degrades host antimicrobial peptides.

Tang. Lingli L; Chen. Jianlin J; Zhou. Zhiguang Z; Yu. Ping P; Yang. Zhangsheng Z; Zhong. Guangming G

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 is the most potent of the tested antimicrobial peptides against C. trachomatis
  • The chlamydial protease CPAF degrades LL‑37 and other anti‑chlamydial peptides
  • Degradation of LL‑37 by CPAF likely aids the bacteria in ascending infection

Practical Outcomes

  • Boosting LL‑37 (for example with vitamin D or other immune‑support strategies) may help overall defenses, but Chlamydia can neutralize it, so it isn’t a reliable stand‑alone treatment. No specific dosing or supplement protocol is provided; focus on preventing infection and supporting broader immune health.

Summary

The research shows that the body’s natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can kill the sexually transmitted bacteria Chlamydia trachomatis, but the bacteria release an enzyme called CPAF that breaks down LL‑37, stopping its action and helping the infection spread.

Abstract

Chlamydia trachomatis infection in the lower genital tract, if untreated, can ascend to the upper genital tract, potentially leading to complications such as tubal factor infertility. The ascension involves cell-to-cell spreading, which may require C. trachomatis organisms to overcome mucosal extracellular effectors such as antimicrobial peptides. We found that among the 8 antimicrobial peptides tested, the cathelicidin LL-37 that is produced by both urogenital epithelial cells and the recruited neutrophils possessed a most potent antichlamydial activity. Interestingly, this antichlamydial activity was completely inhibited by CPAF, a C. trachomatis-secreted serine protease. The inhibition was dependent on CPAF's proteolytic activity. CPAF selectively degraded LL-37 and other antimicrobial peptides with an antichlamydial activity. CPAF is known to secrete into and accumulate in the infected host cell cytoplasm at the late stage of chlamydial intracellular growth and may be released to confront the extracellular antimicrobial peptides before the intra-inclusion organisms are exposed to extracellular environments during host cell lysis and chlamydial spreading. Thus, the finding that CPAF selectively targets host antimicrobial peptides that possess antichlamydial activities for proteolysis suggests that CPAF may contribute to C. trachomatis pathogenicity by aiding in ascending infection.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2015

Date

2015-03-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.micinf.2015.02.005

Citations

47

References

46