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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2014 pubmed 44 citations

Targeting pro-resolution pathways to combat chronic inflammation in COPD.

Bozinovski. Steven S; Anthony. Desiree D; Vlahos. Ross R

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 is an agonist of the ALX/FPR2 receptor, which is important for ending inflammation.
  • In COPD, pro‑resolution mediators (like lipoxin A4) fail to switch off inflammation, possibly due to biased signaling of ALX/FPR2.
  • Developing stable analogs of pro‑resolving molecules could provide new therapeutic ways to resolve chronic lung inflammation.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, the study offers no direct protocol or dosage to try. It mainly highlights a drug‑development target rather than a lifestyle or supplement recommendation. Until stable analogs are created and tested, there’s no actionable step for improving longevity or performance from this research.

Summary

The paper explains why inflammation stays high in COPD lungs and points out that a natural peptide called LL‑37 can bind to a receptor (ALX/FPR2) that usually helps turn inflammation off. In COPD, this “off‑switch” doesn’t work well, and the authors suggest that designing more stable drug‑like versions of the natural anti‑inflammatory signals could help.

Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is an inflammatory lung condition that is associated with irreversible airflow obstruction as a consequence of small airways disease, excessive mucus production and emphysema. Paradoxically, excessive inflammation fails to control microbial pathogens that not only colonise COPD airways, but also trigger acute exacerbations, which markedly increase inflammation underlying host tissue damage. Excessive production of leukocyte mobilising cytokines such as CXCL8 (IL-8) and leukotriene B4 (LTB4) in response to environmental stimuli (cigarette smoke and microbial products) are thought to maintain chronic inflammation, in conjunction with inefficient macrophage clearance of microbes and apoptotic neutrophils. In this perspective, we discuss an alternative view on why inflammation persists with a focus on why pro-resolution mediators such as lipoxin A4 (LXA4), D-series resolving and Annexin A1 fail to effectively switch off inflammation in COPD. These pro-resolving mediators converge on the G-protein coupled receptor, ALX/FPR2. This receptor is particularly relevant to COPD as the complex milieu of exogenous and host-derived mediators within the inflamed airways include agonists that potently activate ALX/FPR2, including Serum Amyloid A (SAA) and the cathelicidin, LL-37. There is emerging evidence to suggest that ALX/FPR2 can exist in alternative receptor conformations in an agonist-biased manner, which facilitates alternate functional receptor behaviors. Hence, the development of more stable pro-resolving analogs provides therapeutic opportunities to address ALX/FPR2 conformations to counteract pathogenic signaling and promote non-phlogistic clearance pathways essential for resolution of inflammation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-08-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2014.08.08

Citations

44

References

85