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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2012 pubmed 61 citations

Signaling pathways mediating chemokine induction in keratinocytes by cathelicidin LL-37 and flagellin.

Nijnik. Anastasia A; Pistolic. Jelena J; Filewod. Niall C J NC; Hancock. Robert E W RE

Key Findings

  • LL-37 activates the P2X7 receptor, which then triggers Src family kinases in skin cells
  • Src kinase activation leads to Akt and transcription factors CREB and ATF1 turning on chemokine genes
  • LL-37 and bacterial flagellin together produce a stronger chemokine response than either alone

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings suggest that boosting LL-37 activity or targeting the P2X7‑SFK‑Akt pathway could enhance skin immunity, hinting at future topical or supplement strategies. However, no specific dosage, formulation, or safety data are provided, so biohackers should treat this as mechanistic insight rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol.

Summary

LL-37 is a natural skin peptide that helps the immune system. The study shows it works through a chain of signals (P2X7 → Src kinases → Akt → CREB/ATF1) to boost chemicals that attract immune cells, especially when a bacterial protein called flagellin is present. This explains how LL-37 can strengthen skin defenses, but the work is still basic science and doesn’t give direct dosing or product advice.

Abstract

Cathelicidin LL-37 is a multifunctional immunomodulatory and antimicrobial host defense peptide that has an important role in the immune defenses of the skin and other epithelial barriers. We have previously demonstrated that at physiological concentrations LL-37 synergistically augments the production of immune mediators in response to microbial compounds in human primary keratinocytes. Here we define the signaling mechanisms responsible for this activity. We demonstrate that inhibition of Src family kinases (SFKs) strongly inhibited the synergistic chemokine production in response to LL-37 and flagellin in keratinocytes. SFK activation was induced by LL-37 stimulation and was required for the downstream activation of Akt (protein kinase B) and the transcription factors CREB and ATF1. In cells stimulated with LL-37 and flagellin together, Akt activation was primarily induced by LL-37, while both flagellin and LL-37 contributed to the activation of CREB and ATF1 and consequently chemokine induction. The purinergic receptor P2X₇ was identified as the receptor upstream of SFK activation in LL-37-stimulated keratinocytes. Overall, these findings established the P2X₇-SFK-Akt-CREB/ATF1 signaling pathway activated by LL-37 in primary keratinocytes. These signaling mechanisms mediated the synergistic effects of LL-37 on chemokine production in flagellin-stimulated keratinocytes, and thus might have a role in the immune defenses of the skin and possibly other epithelial barriers.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-04-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1159/000335901

Citations

61

References

47