Citrullination alters immunomodulatory function of LL-37 essential for prevention of endotoxin-induced sepsis.
Koziel. Joanna J; Bryzek. Danuta D; Sroka. Aneta A; Maresz. Katarzyna K; Glowczyk. Izabela I; Bielecka. Ewa E; Kantyka. Tomasz T; Pyrć. Krzysztof K; Svoboda. Pavel P; Pohl. Jan J; Potempa. Jan J
Key Findings
- s ability to bind and neutralize bacterial endotoxin (LPS) by at least 40‑fold.",
- ,
- ,
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re considering LL-37 supplementation for immune support or sepsis prevention, ensure the peptide is not citrullinated—use freshly prepared, high‑purity synthetic LL-37 and store it properly. Avoid taking LL-37 when you have high systemic inflammation, as PAD enzymes may modify the peptide and turn it harmful. Monitoring PAD activity or citrullination markers could be a safety check before use.
Summary
LL-37 is a natural antimicrobial peptide that can calm inflammation, but when its arginine parts are changed to citrulline (a process called citrullination), it loses this ability and can even make sepsis worse. In mice, citrullinated LL-37 couldn't protect against lethal endotoxin shock and actually raised harmful inflammation markers.
Abstract
Cathelicidin LL-37 plays an essential role in innate immunity by killing invading microorganisms and regulating the inflammatory response. These activities depend on the cationic character of the peptide, which is conferred by arginine and lysine residues. At inflammatory foci in vivo, LL-37 is exposed to peptidyl arginine deiminase (PAD), an enzyme released by inflammatory cells. Therefore, we hypothesized that PAD-mediated citrullination of the arginine residues within LL-37 will abrogate its immunomodulatory functions. We found that, when citrullinated, LL-37 was at least 40 times less efficient at neutralizing the proinflammatory activity of LPS due to a marked decrease in its affinity for endotoxin. Also, the ability of citrullinated LL-37 to quench macrophage responses to lipoteichoic acid and poly(I:C) signaling via TLR2 and TLR3, respectively, was significantly reduced. Furthermore, in stark contrast to native LL-37, the modified peptide completely lost the ability to prevent morbidity and mortality in a mouse model of d-galactosamine-sensitized endotoxin shock. In fact, administration of citrullinated LL-37 plus endotoxin actually exacerbated sepsis due to the inability of LL-37 to neutralize LPS and the subsequent enhancement of systemic inflammation due to increased serum levels of IL-6. Importantly, serum from septic mice showed increased PAD activity, which strongly correlated with the level of citrullination, indicating that PAD-driven protein modification occurs in vivo. Because LL-37 is a potential treatment for sepsis, its administration should be preceded by a careful analysis to ensure that the citrullinated peptide is not generated in treated patients.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-04-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.4049/jimmunol.1303062
72
41