NAD-dependent ADP-ribosylation of the human antimicrobial and immune-modulatory peptide LL-37 by ADP-ribosyltransferase-1.
Picchianti. Monica M; Russo. Carla C; Castagnini. Marta M; Biagini. Massimiliano M; Soldaini. Elisabetta E; Balducci. Enrico E
Key Findings
- ART1 enzyme can ADP‑ribosylate LL-37 in vitro.
- Up to four of the five arginine residues can be modified when NAD levels are high.
Practical Outcomes
- If you take NAD‑boosting supplements or have high tissue NAD, it could theoretically dampen the activity of any LL‑37 you might be using as a supplement. However, the study was done only in a lab setting, so no specific dosing changes or new protocols are recommended yet. Keep an eye on future research to see if NAD levels in the body meaningfully impact LL‑37’s effectiveness.
Summary
Scientists found that the immune peptide LL-37 can have up to four of its five arginine spots chemically tagged with ADP‑ribose when it meets the enzyme ART1 and lots of NAD. This tagging adds negative charge, making LL-37 less positively charged, which could weaken its ability to stick to cell membranes and other negatively charged molecules like DNA. The change might alter how LL-37 works in the body, but the experiments were done in a test tube, not in people.
Abstract
LL-37 is a cationic peptide belonging to the cathelicidin family that has antimicrobial and immune-modulatory properties. Here we show that the mammalian mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase-1 (ART1), which selectively transfers the ADP-ribose moiety from NAD to arginine residues, ADP-ribosylates LL-37 in vitro. The incorporation of ADP-ribose was first observed by Western blot analysis and then confirmed by MALDI-TOF. Mass-spectrometry showed that up to four of the five arginine residues present in LL-37 could be ADP-ribosylated on the same peptide when incubated at a high NAD concentration in the presence of ART1. The attachment of negatively charged ADP-ribose moieties considerably alters the positive charge of the arginine residues thus reducing the cationicity of LL-37. The cationic nature of LL-37 is key for its ability to interact with cell membranes or negatively charged biomolecules, such as DNA, RNA, F-actin and glycosaminoglycans. Thus, the ADP-ribosylation of LL-37 is expected to have the potential to modulate LL-37 biological activities in several physiological and pathological settings.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-08-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1177/1753425914536242
7
50