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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2014 pubmed 49 citations

Lack of cathelicidin processing in Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome patients reveals essential role of LL-37 in periodontal homeostasis.

Eick. Sigrun S; Puklo. Magdalena M; Adamowicz. Karina K; Kantyka. Tomasz T; Hiemstra. Pieter P; Stennicke. Henning H; Guentsch. Arndt A; Schacher. Beate B; Eickholz. Peter P; Potempa. Jan J

Key Findings

  • PLS patients lack functional cathepsin C, so neutrophil protease 3 can’t process hCAP18 into LL‑37.
  • LL‑37 is completely absent in gingival fluid of PLS patients despite normal levels of its precursor.
  • Other antimicrobial peptides (e.g., alpha‑defensins) remain present, indicating the specific loss of LL‑37 drives the severe periodontitis.
  • Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, a key periodontal pathogen, is highly prevalent in PLS and is readily killed by LL‑37 in vitro.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the work suggests that boosting LL‑37 (or its activity) could be a strategy to improve gum health and fight specific oral pathogens. While the study doesn’t test supplements, it supports exploring ways to increase LL‑37 levels—such as vitamin D optimization, certain probiotics, or topical LL‑37‑derived peptides—especially for those prone to gum disease.

Summary

The study shows that people with Papillon‑Lefèvre syndrome can't turn the protein hCAP18 into the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 because a key enzyme is broken. Without LL‑37, harmful bacteria build up in the gums, causing severe early‑onset gum disease. This highlights LL‑37’s crucial role in keeping the mouth healthy.

Abstract

Loss-of-function point mutations in the cathepsin C gene are the underlying genetic event in patients with Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome (PLS). PLS neutrophils lack serine protease activity essential for cathelicidin LL-37 generation from hCAP18 precursor. We hypothesized that a local deficiency of LL-37 in the infected periodontium is mainly responsible for one of the clinical hallmark of PLS: severe periodontitis already in early childhood. To confirm this effect, we compared the level of neutrophil-derived enzymes and antimicrobial peptides in gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) and saliva from PLS, aggressive and chronic periodontitis patients. Although neutrophil numbers in GCF were present at the same level in all periodontitis groups, LL-37 was totally absent in GCF from PLS patients despite the large amounts of its precursor, hCAP18. The absence of LL-37 in PLS patients coincided with the deficiency of both cathepsin C and protease 3 activities. The presence of other neutrophilic anti-microbial peptides in GCF from PLS patients, such as alpha-defensins, were comparable to that found in chronic periodontitis. In PLS microbial analysis revealed a high prevalence of Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans infection. Most strains were susceptible to killing by LL-37. Collectively, these findings imply that the lack of protease 3 activation by dysfunctional cathepsin C in PLS patients leads to the deficit of antimicrobial and immunomodulatory functions of LL-37 in the gingiva, allowing for infection with A. actinomycetemcomitans and the development of severe periodontal disease.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-09-27T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1186/s13023-014-0148-y

Citations

49

References

51