Cathelicidin LL-37: a defense molecule with a potential role in psoriasis pathogenesis.
Dombrowski. Yvonne Y; Schauber. Jürgen J
Key Findings
- LL-37 is over‑expressed in inflamed psoriatic skin
- LL-37 binds extracellular self‑DNA and can activate immune cells, causing inflammation
- LL-37 also binds intracellular self‑DNA and can dampen inflammation via the AIM2 inflammasome
- Vitamin D analogues and UVB therapy increase LL‑37 while still improving psoriasis symptoms
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this means that simply boosting LL‑37 (e.g., with vitamin D or UV exposure) isn’t automatically harmful and may even be beneficial. However, there’s no clear dosing guide yet, so any attempts to modulate LL‑37 should be cautious and experimental, watching for skin reactions.
Summary
LL-37 is a natural skin peptide that’s found in higher amounts in psoriasis. It can grab DNA released from dying cells, which sometimes sparks an immune flare‑up, but it can also calm down DNA‑driven inflammation inside skin cells. Treatments like vitamin D creams or UV light raise LL-37 levels yet still help psoriasis, showing the peptide’s role is complicated.
Abstract
Epidermal keratinocytes produce and secrete antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) that subsequently form a chemical shield on the skin surface. Cathelicidins are one family of AMPs in skin with various further immune functions. Consequently, dysfunction of these peptides has been implicated in the pathogenesis of inflammatory skin disease. In particular, the cathelicidin LL-37 is overexpressed in inflamed skin in psoriasis, binds to extracellular self-DNA released from dying cells and converts self-DNA in a potent stimulus for plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs). Subsequently, pDCs secrete type I interferons and trigger an auto-inflammatory cascade. Paradoxically, therapies targeting the vitamin D pathway such as vitamin D analogues or UVB phototherapy ameliorate cutaneous inflammation in psoriasis but strongly induce cathelicidin expression in skin at the same time. Current evidence now suggests that self-DNA present in the cytosol of keratinocytes is also pro-inflammatory active and triggers IL-1β secretion in psoriatic lesions through the AIM2 inflammasome. This time, however, binding of LL-37 to self-DNA neutralizes DNA-mediated inflammation. Hence, cathelicidin LL-37 shows contrasting roles in skin inflammation in psoriasis and might serve as a target for novel therapies for this chronic skin disease.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-05-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1600-0625.2012.01459.x
87
71