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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2013 pubmed 26 citations

Defensin production by human limbo-corneal fibroblasts infected with mycobacteria.

Castañeda-Sánchez. Jorge I JI; García-Pérez. Blanca E BE; Muñoz-Duarte. Ana R AR; Baltierra-Uribe. Shantal L SL; Mejia-López. Herlinda H; López-López. Carlos C; Bautista-De Lucio. Victor M VM; Robles-Contreras. Atzín A; Luna-Herrera. Julieta J

Key Findings

  • Fibroblasts have baseline production of hBD1 and LL‑37, which increases with PMA stimulation.
  • M. abscessus causes the highest levels of hBD1 and LL‑37 but the bacteria survive in the cells.
  • M. tuberculosis leads to low hBD1, moderate LL‑37 and a non‑replicative bacterial state.
  • M. smegmatis induces low defensins, high IL‑6, and is cleared from the cells.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, the findings don’t translate into direct health or performance protocols. The work mainly adds basic knowledge about how LL‑37 behaves in eye‑related cells during infection, with no clear guidance for systemic use or dosage.

Summary

The study shows that eye‑area fibroblast cells naturally make the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and other defensins, and that different types of mycobacteria (the bacteria that cause TB and related infections) change how much of these peptides and inflammation signals the cells produce. Some bacteria trigger more LL‑37 but aren’t cleared, while others trigger less peptide but are eliminated.

Abstract

Epithelial cells of the cornea and the conjunctiva constitutively produce antimicrobial peptides; however, the production of defensins by other cell types located around the eye has not been investigated. We analyzed the production of beta-defensins (hBD) and cathelicidin LL-37 during the infection of primary limbo-corneal fibroblasts with M. tuberculosis (MTB), M. abscessus (MAB), and M. smegmatis (MSM). The intracellular survival of each mycobacterium, the production of cytokines and the changes on the distribution of the actin filaments during the infection were also analyzed. Fibroblasts produce basal levels of hBD1 and LL-37 and under PMA stimulation they produce hBD2, hBD3 and overexpress hBD1 and LL-37. MAB induced the highest levels of hBD1 and LL-37 and intermediate levels of IL-6; however, MAB was not eliminated. In addition, MAB induced the greatest change to the distribution of the actin filaments. MTB also produced changes in the structure of the cytoskeleton and induced low levels of hBD1 and IL-6, and intermediate levels of LL-37. The balance of these molecules induced by MTB appeared to contribute to the non-replicative state observed in the limbo-corneal cells. MSM induced the lowest levels of hBD1 and LL-37 but the highest levels of IL-6; MSM was eliminated. The results suggest that mycobacterial infections regulate the production of antimicrobial peptides and cytokines, which in conjunction can contribute to the control of the bacilli.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-02-04T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/pathogens2010013

Citations

26

References

59