Antimicrobial cathelicidin peptide LL-37 inhibits the LPS/ATP-induced pyroptosis of macrophages by dual mechanism.
Hu. Zhongshuang Z; Murakami. Taisuke T; Suzuki. Kaori K; Tamura. Hiroshi H; Kuwahara-Arai. Kyoko K; Iba. Toshiaki T; Nagaoka. Isao I
Key Findings
- LL-37 reduces IL‑1β production, caspase‑1 activation, inflammasome assembly, and cell death in macrophage‑like cells exposed to LPS and ATP.
- The peptide blocks LPS from binding to target cells, cutting off the initial trigger for inflammation.
- LL-37 also interferes with P2X7 receptor signaling, preventing ATP‑induced activation of caspase‑1.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study suggests LL-37 has anti‑inflammatory potential, but it does not provide dosing, delivery methods, or safety data for human use. Until a reliable way to supplement or boost LL-37 is established, the findings are mainly of scientific interest rather than a ready‑to‑apply protocol.
Summary
The human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 can block a type of inflammatory cell death (pyroptosis) that is triggered by bacterial components (LPS) and danger signals (ATP). It does this by both stopping LPS from sticking to cells and by preventing the ATP‑driven P2X7 receptor from activating the death pathway.
Abstract
Pyroptosis is a caspase-1 dependent cell death, associated with proinflammatory cytokine production, and is considered to play a crucial role in sepsis. Pyroptosis is induced by the two distinct stimuli, microbial PAMPs (pathogen associated molecular patterns) and endogenous DAMPs (damage associated molecular patterns). Importantly, cathelicidin-related AMPs (antimicrobial peptides) have a role in innate immune defense. Notably, human cathelicidin LL-37 exhibits the protective effect on the septic animal models. Thus, in this study, to elucidate the mechanism for the protective action of LL-37 on sepsis, we utilized LPS (lipopolysaccharide) and ATP (adenosine triphosphate) as a PAMP and a DAMP, respectively, and examined the effect of LL-37 on the LPS/ATP-induced pyroptosis of macrophage-like J774 cells. The data indicated that the stimulation of J774 cells with LPS and ATP induces the features of pyroptosis, including the expression of IL-1β mRNA and protein, activation of caspase-1, inflammasome formation and cell death. Moreover, LL-37 inhibits the LPS/ATP-induced IL-1β expression, caspase-1 activation, inflammasome formation, as well as cell death. Notably, LL-37 suppressed the LPS binding to target cells and ATP-induced/P2X7-mediated caspase-1 activation. Together these observations suggest that LL-37 potently inhibits the LPS/ATP-induced pyroptosis by both neutralizing the action of LPS and inhibiting the response of P2X7 to ATP. Thus, the present finding may provide a novel insight into the modulation of sepsis utilizing LL-37 with a dual action on the LPS binding and P2X7 activation.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-01-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0085765
128
61