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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2016 pubmed 16 citations

Telomeric G-quadruplex-forming DNA fragments induce TLR9-mediated and LL-37-regulated invasion in breast cancer cells in vitro.

Tuomela. Johanna M JM; Sandholm. Jouko A JA; Kaakinen. Mika M; Hayden. Katherine L KL; Haapasaari. Kirsi-Maria KM; Jukkola-Vuorinen. Arja A; Kauppila. Joonas H JH; Lehenkari. Petri P PP; Harris. Kevin W KW; Graves. David E DE; Selander. Katri S KS

Key Findings

  • Nuclease‑resistant DNA fragments, especially a telomeric G‑quadruplex, trigger TLR9‑dependent invasion of breast cancer cells in vitro.
  • LL‑37 increases cellular uptake of these DNA fragments but, when bound to them, lowers the DNA‑induced invasive behavior.
  • Blocking matrix‑metalloproteases or serine proteases stops the DNA‑driven invasion, indicating these enzymes are involved.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the work does not suggest a new supplement protocol or a clear health benefit of LL‑37. It hints that LL‑37 might have complex effects on cancer‑related pathways, so using it without medical guidance, especially for people with cancer risk, is not advisable. The study mainly adds mechanistic knowledge rather than actionable steps for longevity or performance.

Summary

The study shows that certain short DNA pieces can make breast cancer cells more invasive by activating a DNA sensor called TLR9. A natural peptide called LL‑37 helps the cells take up these DNA pieces but surprisingly reduces the invasion they cause. The findings are based on cell‑culture experiments and do not give direct advice for everyday health practices.

Abstract

Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) is a cellular DNA-receptor widely expressed in cancers. We previously showed that synthetic and self-derived DNA fragments induce TLR9-mediated breast cancer cell invasion in vitro. We investigated here the invasive effects of two nuclease-resistant DNA fragments, a 9-mer hairpin, and a G-quadruplex DNA based on the human telomere sequence, both having native phosphodiester backbone. Cellular uptake of DNAs was investigated with immunofluorescence, invasion was studied with Matrigel-assays, and mRNA and protein expression were studied with qPCR and Western blotting and protease activity with zymograms. TLR9 expression was suppressed through siRNA. Although both DNAs induced TLR9-mediated changes in pro-invasive mRNA expression, only the telomeric G-quadruplex DNA significantly increased cellular invasion. This was inhibited with GM6001 and aprotinin, suggesting MMP- and serine protease mediation. Furthermore, complexing with LL-37, a cathelicidin-peptide present in breast cancers, increased 9-mer hairpin and G-quadruplex DNA uptake into the cancer cells. However, DNA/LL-37 complexes decreased invasion, as compared with DNA-treatment alone. Invasion studies were conducted also with DNA fragments isolated from neoadjuvant chemotherapy-treated breast tumors. Also such DNA induced breast cancer cell invasion in vitro. As with the synthetic DNAs, this invasive effect was reduced by complexing the neoadjuvant tumor-derived DNAs with LL-37. We conclude that 9-mer hairpin and G-quadruplex DNA fragments are nuclease-resistant DNA structures that can act as invasion-inducing TLR9 ligands. Their cellular uptake and the invasive effects are regulated via LL-37. Although such structures may be present in chemotherapy-treated tumors, the clinical significance of this finding requires further studying.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-01-18T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s10549-016-3683-5

Citations

16

References

51