The antimicrobial propeptide hCAP-18 plasma levels in neutropenia of various aetiologies: a prospective study.
Ye. Ying Y; Carlsson. Göran G; Karlsson-Sjöberg. Jenny M T JM; Borregaard. Niels N; Modéer. Thomas U TU; Andersson. Mats L ML; Pütsep. Katrin L-A KL
Key Findings
- Patients with severe congenital neutropenia have the lowest plasma hCAP‑18 levels.
- hCAP‑18 ELISA test showed 100% sensitivity and 98.8% specificity for diagnosing this condition.
- Reduced hCAP‑18 levels were also seen in several other neutropenic disorders such as Shwachman‑Diamond, Barth, Cohen syndromes, AML, and specific granule deficiency.
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this research isn’t directly actionable. It mainly offers a diagnostic tool for clinicians to differentiate neutropenia causes, not a protocol for LL‑37 supplementation or performance enhancement.
Summary
The study shows that measuring the protein hCAP-18 (the precursor to the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37) in blood can accurately tell apart different causes of low neutrophil counts, especially severe congenital neutropenia, but it doesn’t give any guidance on using LL‑37 as a supplement or treatment.
Abstract
The underlying cause of neutropenia may be difficult to determine due to similar clinical presentation in many neutropenic conditions. The neutrophil protein hCAP-18 (pro-LL-37) is a major component of neutrophil secondary granules and in this prospective study we assessed the use of hCAP-18 levels in blood plasma for differential diagnosis of neutropenic patients (n = 133) of various aetiologies. Plasma levels of hCAP-18 were determined using immunoblot and ELISA. Patients with severe congenital neutropenia (n = 23) presented with the lowest levels of plasma hCAP-18 and differential diagnostic accuracy revealed high sensitivity (100%) and specificity (98.8%) for hCAP-18 ELISA. The correlation coefficient of the hCAP-18 ELISA versus immunoblotting was (R = 0.831) and that of the peptide LL-37 ELISA versus immunoblotting was (R = 0.405) (P < 0.001). Plasma hCAP-18 levels thus displayed high diagnostic value in differential diagnosis of chronic neutropenia. Neutropenic patients with Shwachman-Diamond syndrome, Barth syndrome, Cohen syndrome, acute myeloid leukaemia and specific granule deficiency presented with reduced plasma hCAP-18 levels as well. The blood plasma level of hCAP-18 was thus low in conditions in which the neutrophil antibacterial propeptide hCAP-18 is deficient, i.e. severe congenital neutropenia and neutrophil-specific granule deficiency, and in conditions in which bone marrow myelopoiesis is negatively affected.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-06-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/srep11685
21
47