Antimicrobial peptide plasma concentrations in patients with community-acquired pneumonia.
Jendeberg. Anna Lange AL; Strålin. Kristoffer K; Hultgren. Olof O
Key Findings
- Patients with pneumonia had higher plasma levels of SLPI and BPI compared to healthy people.
- LL‑37 and HNP 1‑3 levels were unchanged in pneumonia patients.
- SLPI levels were higher in male pneumonia patients than in females, but this sex difference was not seen in other groups.
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests that simply relying on natural LL‑37 spikes during infection may not be useful, and there’s no evidence here to change dosing or supplementation strategies. For biohackers, the main takeaway is that LL‑37 doesn’t appear to rise in acute lung infection, so monitoring or boosting it isn’t supported by this data. The sex‑specific SLPI finding is interesting but not yet actionable for health protocols.
Summary
In people with community‑acquired pneumonia, two antimicrobial proteins (SLPI and BPI) go up in the blood, but LL‑37 – the peptide many biohackers talk about – does not. The rise in SLPI was bigger in men than women, and none of these proteins predicted how sick someone got or what bug caused the infection.
Abstract
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a common and potentially life-threatening infection. Innate immunity is the first line of defence, and antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) produced by white blood cells and at epithelial barriers participate by killing microorganisms and neutralizing bacterial toxins. We wanted to investigate whether concentrations of AMPs (1) are increased in CAP, (2) predict the clinical outcome, and (3) differ depending on the causative microbe. Plasma concentrations of AMPs were measured using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in 89 patients with CAP, 21 patients with non-respiratory tract infections (non-RTI), and 63 healthy control subjects. In subjects with CAP, mean plasma concentrations of secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI) and bactericidal/ permeability-increasing protein (BPI) were significantly higher than in healthy control subjects (85 vs 45 ng/ml, p < 0.001 and 48 vs 10 ng/ml, p < 0.001, respectively), but less markedly increased in patients with non-RTI (68 ng/ml, p = 0.06 and 41 ng/ml, p = 0.43). LL-37 and human neutrophil peptides 1-3 (HNP 1-3) levels were not increased in subjects with CAP. Levels of BPI and SLPI did not correlate to severity of disease, and AMP levels did not differ depending on the causative agent. Interestingly, male subjects with CAP displayed increased concentrations of SLPI compared to females. This was not observed in subjects with non-RTI and healthy control subjects. Subjects with CAP showed increased plasma concentrations of SLPI and BPI compared to healthy control subjects. The finding of higher SLPI levels in male subjects with CAP implies that there are sex-dependent immunological differences in SLPI turnover.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-01-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.3109/00365548.2012.760844
6
37