The human antimicrobial peptide LL-37, but not the mouse ortholog, mCRAMP, can stimulate signaling by poly(I:C) through a FPRL1-dependent pathway.
Singh. Divyendu D; Qi. Rongsu R; Jordan. Jarrat L JL; San Mateo. Lani L; Kao. C Cheng CC
Key Findings
- LL‑37 binds dsRNA better than the mouse peptide mCRAMP
- LL‑37 and dsRNA together move to early endosomes and boost TLR3 signaling
- The boost in signaling depends on the FPRL1 receptor, not seen with mCRAMP
Practical Outcomes
- LL‑37 may enhance innate antiviral responses by directing dsRNA to the right cellular compartments, but the study doesn’t give dosage or safety info. For biohackers, it’s a mechanistic clue rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol, and more research is needed before trying LL‑37 supplements for viral immunity.
Summary
The human peptide LL‑37 can grab double‑stranded RNA (like viral genetic material) and help it trigger immune sensors inside cells, while the mouse version can’t do this. This effect needs a specific cell‑surface receptor (FPRL1) and changes how the RNA is trafficked inside the cell.
Abstract
LL-37 is an antimicrobial peptide produced by human cells that can down-regulate the lipopolysaccharide-induced innate immune responses and up-regulate double-stranded (ds) RNA-induced innate responses through Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3). The murine LL-37 ortholog, mCRAMP, also inhibited lipopolysaccharide-induced responses, but unlike LL-37, it inhibited viral-induced responses in mouse cells. A fluorescence polarization assay showed that LL-37 was able to bind dsRNA better than mCRAMP. In the human lung epithelial cell line BEAS-2B, LL-37, but not mCRAMP, colocalized with TLR3, and the colocalization was increased in the presence of dsRNA. The presence of poly(I:C) increased the accumulation of LL-37 in Rab5 endosomes. Signaling by cells induced with both LL-37 and poly(I:C) was sensitive to inhibitors that affect clathrin-independent trafficking, whereas signaling by poly(I:C) alone was not, suggesting that the LL-37-poly(I:C) complex trafficked to signaling endosomes by a different mechanism than poly(I:C) alone. siRNA knockdown of known LL-37 receptors identified that FPRL1 was responsible for TLR3 signaling induced by LL-37-poly(I:C). These results show that LL-37 and mCRAMP have different activities in TLR3 signaling and that LL-37 can redirect trafficking of poly(I:C) to effect signaling by TLR3 in early endosomes in a mechanism that involves FPRL1.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-02-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1074/jbc.m112.440883