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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2013 pubmed 13 citations

Physiological relevance of LL-37 induced bladder inflammation and mast cells.

Oottamasathien. Siam S; Jia. Wanjian W; Roundy. Lindsi McCoard LM; Zhang. Jianxing J; Wang. Li L; Ye. Xiangyang X; Hill. A Cameron AC; Savage. Justin J; Lee. Wong Yong WY; Hannon. Ann Marie AM; Milner. Sylvia S; Prestwich. Glenn D GD

Key Findings

  • Urinary LL-37 was 89‑fold higher in pediatric spina bifida patients compared to controls
  • In mice, intravesical LL-37 caused dose‑dependent bladder inflammation
  • Fluorescent LL-37 bound the urothelium immediately but disappeared after 24 hours
  • Mast cell infiltration increased with higher LL‑37 concentrations

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers considering LL‑37 supplementation or experimental use, the data warn that high local concentrations can provoke bladder inflammation and mast cell activation. It’s advisable to avoid direct bladder exposure to LL‑37 and to stay within low, well‑studied systemic doses until safety is clearer.

Summary

The study shows that the antimicrobial peptide LL-37 is found at very high levels in the urine of children with spina bifida and that, when put into mouse bladders, it causes inflammation that gets worse with higher doses and involves mast cells. This suggests that too much LL-37 can irritate the bladder and trigger immune cells.

Abstract

We established the physiological relevance of LL-37 induced bladder inflammation. We hypothesized that 1) human urinary LL-37 is increased in pediatric patients with spina bifida, 2) LL-37 induced inflammation occurs in our mouse model via urothelial binding and is dose dependent and 3) LL-37 induced inflammation involves mast cells. To test our first hypothesis, we obtained urine samples from 56 pediatric patients with spina bifida and 22 normal patients. LL-37 was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Our second hypothesis was tested in C57Bl/6 mice challenged with 7 LL-37 concentrations intravesically for 1 hour. At 24 hours tissues were examined histologically and myeloperoxidase assay was done to quantitate inflammation. In separate experiments fluorescent LL-37 was instilled and tissues were obtained immediately (time = 0) and at 24 hours (time = 24). To test our final hypothesis, we performed immunohistochemistry for mast cell tryptase and evaluated 5 high power fields per bladder to determine the mean number of mast cells per mm(2). Urinary LL-37 was 89-fold higher in patients with spina bifida. Mouse LL-37 dose escalation experiments revealed increased inflammation at higher LL-37 concentrations. Fluorescent LL-37 demonstrated global urothelial binding at time = 0 but was not visible at time = 24. Immunohistochemistry for tryptase revealed mast cell infiltration in all tissue layers. At higher concentrations the LL-37 challenge led to significantly greater mast cell infiltration. Urinary LL-37 was significantly increased in pediatric patients with spina bifida. To our knowledge we report for the first time that LL-37 can elicit profound, dose dependent bladder inflammation involving the urothelium. Finally, inflammation propagation involves mast cells.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-01-09T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.juro.2013.01.002

Citations

13

References

32