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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2013 pubmed

Effect of intracellular expression of antimicrobial peptide LL-37 on growth of escherichia coli strain TOP10 under aerobic and anaerobic conditions.

Liu. Wei W; Dong. Shi Lei SL; Xu. Fei F; Wang. Xue Qin XQ; Withers. T Ryan TR; Yu. Hongwei D HD; Wang. Xin X

Key Findings

  • Intracellular LL‑37 stops E. coli growth under aerobic and anaerobic conditions
  • LL‑37 triggers ROS production and lethal membrane depolarization in oxygen‑rich environments
  • Expression of LL‑37 disrupts genes tied to energy production and increases membrane permeability

Practical Outcomes

  • The study shows LL‑37 kills bacteria by targeting their energy metabolism, not just by punching holes in membranes. For DIY biohackers, this suggests that simply applying LL‑37 externally may not replicate the effect; delivery methods that get the peptide inside microbes could be more effective, but the research is still early and not a ready‑to‑use protocol.

Summary

Scientists made E. coli produce the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 inside the cells and found it stops the bacteria from growing, both with oxygen and without. The peptide creates harmful reactive oxygen species when oxygen is present and makes the bacterial membrane leaky, while also messing with the bacteria’s energy‑making genes.

Abstract

Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) can cause lysis of target bacteria by directly inserting themselves into the lipid bilayer. This killing mechanism confounds the identification of the intracellular targets of AMPs. To circumvent this, we used a shuttle vector containing the inducible expression of a human cathelicidin-related AMP, LL-37, to examine its effect on Escherichia coli TOP10 under aerobic and anaerobic growth conditions. Induction of LL-37 caused growth inhibition and alteration in cell morphology to a filamentous phenotype. Further examination of the E. coli cell division protein FtsZ revealed that LL-37 did not interact with FtsZ. Moreover, intracellular expression of LL-37 results in the enhanced production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), causing lethal membrane depolarization under aerobic conditions. Additionally, the membrane permeability was increased after intracellular expression of LL37 under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that intracellular LL-37 mainly affected the expression of genes related to energy production and carbohydrate metabolism. More specifically, genes related to oxidative phosphorylation under both aerobic and anaerobic growth conditions were affected. Collectively, our current study demonstrates that intracellular expression of LL-37 in E. coli can inhibit growth under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. While we confirmed that the generation of ROS is a bactericidal mechanism for LL-37 under aerobic growth conditions, we also found that the intracellular accumulation of cationic LL-37 influences the redox and ion status of the cells under both growth conditions. These data suggest that there is a new AMP-mediated bacterial killing mechanism that targets energy metabolism.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-07-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1128/aac.00825-13