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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2013 pubmed 218 citations

The Human Cathelicidin Antimicrobial Peptide LL-37 as a Potential Treatment for Polymicrobial Infected Wounds.

Duplantier. Allen J AJ; van Hoek. Monique L ML

Key Findings

  • LL-37 shows antimicrobial activity against both Gram‑positive and Gram‑negative bacteria
  • It can disrupt bacterial biofilms that make wounds hard to heal
  • Topical LL‑37 also promotes host wound‑healing processes

Practical Outcomes

  • For now, LL‑37 is not an off‑the‑shelf remedy, but keep an eye on emerging topical formulations. If a safe, stable cream or spray becomes available, it could become a useful addition to wound‑care protocols for chronic infections. Until then, focus on proven hygiene, debridement, and standard antimicrobial treatments.

Summary

LL-37 is a natural human peptide that can kill a wide range of bacteria, break down harmful biofilms, and help wounds heal. The review says that putting LL-37 on the skin might be a good way to treat infected diabetic foot ulcers, but the evidence is still mostly theoretical and comes from lab studies, not real‑world trials.

Abstract

Diabetic patients often have ulcers on their lower-limbs that are infected by multiple biofilm-forming genera of bacteria, and the elimination of the biofilm has proven highly successful in resolving such wounds in patients. To that end, antimicrobial peptides have shown potential as a new anti-biofilm approach. The single human cathelicidin peptide LL-37 has been shown to have antimicrobial and anti-biofilm activity against multiple Gram-positive and Gram-negative human pathogens, and have wound-healing effects on the host. The combination of the anti-biofilm effect and wound-healing properties of LL-37 may make it highly effective in resolving polymicrobially infected wounds when topically applied. Such a peptide or its derivatives could be a platform from which to develop new therapeutic strategies to treat biofilm-mediated infections of wounds. This review summarizes known mechanisms that regulate the endogenous levels of LL-37 and discusses the anti-biofilm, antibacterial, and immunological effects of deficient vs. excessive concentrations of LL-37 within the wound environment. Here, we review recent advances in understanding the therapeutic potential of this peptide and other clinically advanced peptides as a potential topical treatment for polymicrobial infected wounds.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-07-03T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3389/fimmu.2013.00143

Citations

218

References

127