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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2011 pubmed

Decoding the functional roles of cationic side chains of the major antimicrobial region of human cathelicidin LL-37.

Wang. Guangshun G; Epand. Raquel F RF; Mishra. Biswajit B; Lushnikova. Tamara T; Thomas. Vinai Chittezham VC; Bayles. Kenneth W KW; Epand. Richard M RM

Key Findings

  • Changing lysines to arginines hurts LL‑37’s ability to kill Staphylococcus aureus
  • Arginine 23 and lysine 25 are essential for rapid killing of Escherichia coli
  • R23 drives early bacterial recognition, outer‑membrane entry, lipid clustering and membrane disruption, while other cationic residues play secondary roles

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings help scientists design more targeted antimicrobial versions of LL‑37, but they don’t give a ready‑to‑use dosage or protocol for self‑experimentation. For biohackers, it means that any DIY use of LL‑37 or related peptides may vary in effectiveness depending on the bacterial strain and that tweaking the peptide’s sequence could change its antimicrobial power.

Summary

LL-37 is a natural human peptide that helps fight infections and heal wounds. This study shows that only a few specific building blocks (especially an arginine at position 23 and a lysine at 25) are crucial for killing the common gut bug E. coli, while other parts are less important. For Staph bacteria, the peptide is less sensitive to single changes.

Abstract

Human cathelicidin LL-37 is a critical cationic antimicrobial peptide for host defense against infection, immune modulation, and wound healing. This article elucidates the functional roles of the cationic side chains of the major antimicrobial region of LL-37, corresponding to residues 17 to 32 (designated GF-17). Antimicrobial assays, killing kinetics studies, and vesicle leakage experiments all indicate that a conversion of lysines to arginines affected the ability of the peptide to kill the Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus strain USA300. Alanine scanning experiments show that S. aureus is less sensitive than Escherichia coli to a single cationic residue mutation of GF-17. Among the five cationic residues, R23 appears to be somewhat important in killing S. aureus. However, R23 and K25 of GF-17 are of prime importance in killing the Gram-negative organism E. coli. In particular, R23 is essential for (i) rapid recognition, (ii) permeation of the E. coli outer membrane, (iii) clustering of anionic lipids in a membrane system mimicking the E. coli inner membrane, and (iv) membrane disruption. Bacterial aggregation (i.e., rapid recognition via charge neutralization) is the first step of the peptide action. Structurally, R23 is located in the interface (i.e., the first action layer), a situation ideal for the interactions listed above. In contrast, residues K18, R19, and R29 are on the hydrophilic surface of the amphipathic helix and play only a secondary role. Mapping of the functional spectrum of cationic residues of GF-17 provides a solid basis for engineering bacterium-specific antimicrobials using this highly potent template.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-11-14T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1128/aac.05637-11