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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2014 pubmed 42 citations

No evidence of pathogenic involvement of cathelicidins in patient cohorts and mouse models of lupus and arthritis.

Kienhöfer. D D; Hahn. J J; Schubert. I I; Reinwald. C C; Ipseiz. N N; Lang. S C SC; Borràs. È Bosch ÈB; Amann. K K; Sjöwall. C C; Barron. A E AE; Hueber. A J AJ; Agerberth. B B; Schett. G G; Hoffmann. M H MH

Key Findings

  • SLE patients have higher anti‑LL‑37 antibodies, but these levels don’t correlate with disease activity.
  • Mice without the cathelicidin peptide (CRAMP‑/-) develop lupus‑like and arthritis symptoms just like normal mice.
  • Overall disease markers, tissue damage, and inflammation were unchanged by the absence of cathelicidins.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this means that targeting LL‑37 with supplements or therapies is unlikely to affect lupus or arthritis outcomes. The peptide doesn’t appear to be a useful lever for modulating auto‑immune disease severity, so resources might be better spent on other interventions.

Summary

The study looked at whether the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 (or its mouse version CRAMP) plays a harmful role in lupus or rheumatoid arthritis. It found that people with lupus have higher antibodies against LL‑37, but these don’t link to disease severity. Mice lacking CRAMP showed no difference in disease development or severity compared to normal mice. In short, LL‑37 doesn’t seem to drive these autoimmune diseases.

Abstract

Apart from their role in the immune defence against pathogens evidence of a role of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) in autoimmune diseases has accumulated in the past years. The aim of this project was to examine the functional impact of the human cathelicidin LL-37 and the mouse cathelicidin-related AMP (CRAMP) on the pathogenesis of lupus and arthritis. Serum LL-37 and anti-LL-37 levels were measured by ELISA in healthy donors and patients with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) and Rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Pristane-induced lupus was induced in female wild type (WT) and cathelicidin-deficient (CRAMP-/-) mice. Serum levels of anti-Sm/RNP, anti-dsDNA, and anti-histone were determined via ELISA, cytokines in sera and peritoneal lavages were measured via Multiplex. Expression of Interferon I stimulated genes (ISG) was determined by real-time PCR. Collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) was induced in male WT and CRAMP-/- mice and arthritis severity was visually scored and analysed histomorphometrically by OsteoMeasure software. Serum levels of anti-LL-37 were higher in SLE-patients compared to healthy donors or patients with RA. However, no correlation to markers of disease activity or organ involvement was observed. No significant differences of autoantibody or cytokine/chemokine levels, or of expression of ISGs were observed between WT and CRAMP-/- mice after pristane-injection. Furthermore, lung and kidney pathology did not differ in the absence of CRAMP. Incidence and severity of CIA and histological parameters (inflammation, cartilage degradation, and bone erosion) were not different in WT and CRAMP-/- mice. Although cathelicidins are upregulated in mouse models of lupus and arthritis, cathelicidin-deficiency did not persistently affect the diseases. Also in patients with SLE, autoantibodies against cathelicidins did not correlate with disease manifestation. Reactivity against cathelicidins in lupus and arthritis could thus be an epiphenomenon caused by extensive overexpression in blood and affected tissues. In addition, other cationic AMPs could functionally compensate for the deficiency of cathelicidins.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-12-23T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0115474

Citations

42

References

34