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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2013 pubmed

Cathelicidin LL-37 induces angiogenesis via PGE2-EP3 signaling in endothelial cells, in vivo inhibition by aspirin.

Salvado. M Dolores MD; Di Gennaro. Antonio A; Lindbom. Lennart L; Agerberth. Birgitta B; Haeggström. Jesper Z JZ

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 stimulates endothelial cells to make PGE2 through COX‑1, not COX‑2
  • The PGE2 then activates the EP3 receptor, driving angiogenesis (new blood‑vessel formation)
  • Aspirin or COX‑1 inhibition blocks the LL‑37‑induced angiogenesis, and adding PGE2 can rescue it

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this means that taking LL‑37 could promote blood‑vessel growth, which might help tissue repair but could also support tumor growth. Aspirin appears to counteract this effect, so co‑taking aspirin might blunt any LL‑37‑driven angiogenesis. However, without human dosing data, there’s no clear protocol to follow yet.

Summary

The study shows that the human peptide LL‑37 can make blood‑vessel cells grow new vessels by turning on a chain of chemicals (COX‑1 → PGE2 → EP3). This effect can be stopped by aspirin, which blocks the same pathway. The findings are mostly basic science and don’t give dosage or safety info for people who might want to use LL‑37 as a supplement.

Abstract

LL-37, the unique cathelicidin expressed in humans, in addition to acting as an endogenous antibiotic, is an important cell-signaling molecule upregulated in ovarian, breast, and lung tumors. However, the role of LL-37 in tumor microenvironment and its specific actions on the endothelial compartment remain elusive. Prostanoids are key regulators of inflammation, and cyclooxygenases (COXs) display proangiogenic activity in vitro and in vivo, mediated principally through prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). Here, we provide evidence for a novel proangiogenic role of LL-37, exerted via activation of endothelial cells and subsequent PGE2 biosynthesis. LL-37 triggers PGE2 synthesis in endothelial cells in a dose-dependent manner with maximal induction after 4 hours. Endothelial PGE2 biosynthesis was dependent on COX-1, rather than COX-2, as judged by pharmacological inhibition and gene silencing. In vitro matrigel assays supported these findings because LL-37-induced cord formation was abolished by COX-1, but not COX-2, small interfering RNA, and the angiogenic phenotype could be rescued by addition of exogenous PGE2. We find that LL-37 acts on endothelial cells as a potent calcium agonist, inducing phosphorylation and activation of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2), promoting a cPLA2→COX-1→PGE2 biosynthetic pathway and subsequent signaling via PGE2 receptor EP3. Moreover, cathelicidin-related antimicrobial peptide, which is the murine ortholog of LL-37, induced prostaglandin-dependent angiogenesis in vivo, which could be blocked by aspirin. Our results identify a novel proangiogenic role of LL-37, suggesting that the axis LL-37/COX-1/PGE2 followed by EP3 signaling is amenable to therapeutic intervention in pathological angiogenesis, for instance by aspirin.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-06-13T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1161/atvbaha.113.301851