Porcine cathelicidins efficiently complex and deliver nucleic acids to plasmacytoid dendritic cells and can thereby mediate bacteria-induced IFN-α responses.
Baumann. Arnaud A; Démoulins. Thomas T; Python. Sylvie S; Summerfield. Artur A
Key Findings
- PMAP-36 binds nucleic acids and delivers them into plasmacytoid dendritic cells within minutes
- The peptide‑DNA complexes trigger strong interferon‑alpha production by these immune cells
- PMAP-36 can boost interferon responses to E. coli, while a scrambled version is less effective
Practical Outcomes
- The study shows cathelicidin peptides can act as natural carriers for nucleic acids to stimulate innate immunity, suggesting a possible route for immune‑boosting supplements. However, it’s an early‑stage, animal‑peptide finding with no human dosing or safety data, so it isn’t ready for direct DIY use.
Summary
Researchers found that a pig-derived antimicrobial peptide called PMAP-36 can grab DNA or RNA and shove it into a type of immune cell (plasmacytoid dendritic cells), causing those cells to release a lot of interferon‑alpha, an important antiviral signal. The effect works fast, doesn’t need the peptide’s usual shape, and also helps the cells react to bacteria that normally wouldn’t trigger a response.
Abstract
Cathelicidins constitute potent antimicrobial peptides characterized by a high cationic charge that enables strong interactions with nucleic acids. In fact, the only human cathelicidin LL-37 triggers rapid sensing of nucleic acids by plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC). Among the porcine cathelicidins, phylogenetic analysis of the C-terminal mature peptide showed that porcine myeloid antimicrobial peptide (PMAP)-36 was the most closely related of the 11 porcine cathelicidins to human LL-37. Despite several investigations evaluating potent antimicrobial functions of porcine cathelicidins, nothing is known about their ability to promote pDC activation. We therefore investigated the capacity of the proline-arginine-rich 39-aa peptide, PMAP-23, PMAP-36, and protegrin-1 to complex with bacterial DNA or synthetic RNA molecules and facilitate pDC activation. We demonstrate that these peptides mediate a rapid and efficient uptake of nucleic acids within minutes, followed by robust IFN-α responses. The highest positively charged cathelicidin, PMAP-36, was found to be the most potent peptide tested for this effect. The peptide-DNA complexes were internalized and also found to associate with the cell membranes of pDC. The amphipathic conformation typical of PMAP-36 was not required for IFN-α induction in pDC. We also demonstrate that PMAP-36 can mediate IFN-α induction in pDC stimulated by Escherichia coli, which alone fail to activate pDC. This response was weaker with a scrambled PMAP-36, relating to its lower antimicrobial activity. Collectively, our data suggest that the antimicrobial and nucleic acid-complexing properties of cathelicidins can mediate pDC activation-promoting adaptive immune responses against microbial infections.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-06-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.4049/jimmunol.1303219
30
45