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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2017 pubmed 13 citations

Interactions of histatin-3 and histatin-5 with actin.

Blotnick. Edna E; Sol. Asaf A; Bachrach. Gilad G; Muhlrad. Andras A

Key Findings

  • Histatin‑3 and histatin‑5 bind extracellular actin and convert it from a globular to a filamentous form, creating bundles.
  • The polymerization and bundling are pH‑dependent; lower pH (more acidic) makes the process more efficient.
  • Histatin‑3 is more potent than histatin‑5, needing less peptide to cause actin changes, likely due to an extra 8‑amino‑acid tail.
  • Binding is mainly electrostatic (disrupted by 50‑100 mM NaCl) and involves a cross‑link at glutamine‑49 on actin.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, these findings don’t translate into a direct supplement or protocol. They suggest that boosting histatin levels could aid oral wound healing or antifungal defense, but there’s no clear dosage, delivery method, or systemic benefit for longevity or performance. Until more applied research emerges, the information is mainly of academic interest.

Summary

The study shows that two saliva proteins, histatin‑3 and histatin‑5, can stick to and bundle actin fibers outside cells. Histatin‑3 does this more strongly and at lower concentrations, especially in acidic conditions. This interaction is mostly driven by electric charges, with some hydrophobic help, and may affect how these proteins work in the mouth.

Abstract

Histatins are histidine rich polypeptides produced in the parotid and submandibular gland and secreted into the saliva. Histatin-3 and -5 are the most important polycationic histatins. They possess antimicrobial activity against fungi such as Candida albicans. Histatin-5 has a higher antifungal activity than histatin-3 while histatin-3 is mostly involved in wound healing in the oral cavity. We found that these histatins, like other polycationic peptides and proteins, such as LL-37, lysozyme and histones, interact with extracellular actin. Histatin-3 and -5 polymerize globular actin (G-actin) to filamentous actin (F-actin) and bundle F-actin filaments. Both actin polymerization and bundling by histatins is pH sensitive due to the high histidine content of histatins. In spite of the equal number of net positive charges and histidine residues in histatin-3 and -5, less histatin-3 is needed than histatin-5 for polymerization and bundling of actin. The efficiency of actin polymerization and bundling by histatins greatly increases with decreasing pH. Histatin-3 and -5 induced actin bundles are dissociated by 100 and 50 mM NaCl, respectively. The relatively low NaCl concentration required to dissociate histatin-induced bundles implies that the actin-histatin filaments bind to each other mainly by electrostatic forces. The binding of histatin-3 to F-actin is stronger than that of histatin-5 showing that hydrophobic forces have also some role in histatin-3- actin interaction. Histatins affect the fluorescence of probes attached to the D-loop of G-actin indicating histatin induced changes in actin structure. Transglutaminase cross-links histatins to actin. Competition and limited proteolysis experiments indicate that the main histatin cross-linking site on actin is glutamine-49 on the D-loop of actin. Both histatin-3 and -5 interacts with actin, however, histatin 3 binds stronger to actin and affects actin structure at lower concentration than histatin-5 due to the extra 8 amino acid sequence at the C-terminus of histatin-3. Extracellular actin might regulate histatin activity in the oral cavity, which should be the subject of further investigation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-03-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1186/s12858-017-0078-0

Citations

13

References

37