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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2012 pubmed 55 citations

Structure, dynamics, and antimicrobial and immune modulatory activities of human LL-23 and its single-residue variants mutated on the basis of homologous primate cathelicidins.

Wang. Guangshun G; Elliott. Melissa M; Cogen. Anna L AL; Ezell. Edward L EL; Gallo. Richard L RL; Hancock. Robert E W RE

Key Findings

  • LL‑23 retains some immune‑activating ability but has weaker antimicrobial activity than LL‑37.
  • Changing Ser9 to Ala (LL‑23A9) or Val (LL‑23V9) makes the peptide more antimicrobial and changes its immune modulation profile.
  • LL‑23A9 keeps MCP‑1 induction (good for immune recruitment) while LL‑23V9 suppresses both baseline and LPS‑stimulated MCP‑1 and TNF‑α, acting as an immunosuppressant.
  • The variants are easier to synthesize and show lower toxicity to mammalian cells compared with LL‑37.

Practical Outcomes

  • These LL‑23 variants could become safer, cheaper peptide tools for boosting immunity or fighting infections, but they have only been tested in vitro so far. No human dosing or safety data exist yet, so biohackers should treat them as experimental and await further animal or clinical studies before considering use.

Summary

Researchers examined a short fragment of the human peptide LL‑37 called LL‑23 and created two tiny variants by swapping one amino acid. These changes made the peptide kill bacteria better and altered its immune effects: one version kept the ability to attract immune cells, while the other suppressed immune signaling. Both are simpler to produce and less toxic than the full‑size LL‑37, but the work is still at the cell‑lab stage.

Abstract

LL-23 is a natural peptide corresponding to the 23 N-terminal amino acid residues of human host defense cathelicidin LL-37. LL-23 demonstrated, compared to LL-37, a conserved ability to induce the chemokine MCP-1 in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells, a lack of ability to suppress induction of the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-α in response to bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS), and reduced antimicrobial activity. Heteronuclear multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) characterization of LL-23 revealed similar secondary structures and backbone dynamics in three membrane-mimetic micelles: SDS, dodecylphosphocholine (DPC), and dioctanoylphosphatidylglycerol. The NMR structure of LL-23 determined in perdeuterated DPC contained a unique serine that segregated the hydrophobic surface of the amphipathic helix into two domains. To improve our understanding, Ser9 of LL-23was changed to either Ala or Val on the basis of homologous primate cathelicidins. These changes made the hydrophobic surface of LL-23 continuous and enhanced antibacterial activity. While identical helical structures did not explain the altered activities, a reduced rate of hydrogen-deuterium exchange from LL-23 to LL-23A9 to LL-23V9 suggested a deeper penetration of LL-23V9 into the interior of the micelles, which correlated with enhanced activities. Moreover, these LL-23 variants had discrete immunomodulatory activities. Both restored the TNF-α dampening activity to the level of LL-37. Furthermore, LL-23A9, like LL-23, maintained superior protective MCP-1 production, while LL-23V9 was strongly immunosuppressive, preventing baseline MCP-1 induction and substantially reducing LPS-stimulated MCP-1 production. Thus, these LL-23 variants, designed on the basis of a structural hot spot, are promising immune modulators that are easier to synthesize and less toxic to mammalian cells than the parent peptide LL-37.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-01-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1021/bi2016266

Citations

55

References

70