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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2011 pubmed 290 citations

Recombinant production of antimicrobial peptides in Escherichia coli: a review.

Li. Yifeng Y

Key Findings

  • Recombinant expression in E. coli is the cheapest way to make large amounts of antimicrobial peptides
  • Fusion partners protect the host and improve peptide stability during production
  • Various cleavage and optimization strategies have been successfully used to produce human peptide LL‑37

Practical Outcomes

  • If you want to produce LL‑37 yourself, you can grow it in E. coli using a suitable fusion tag, then use a specific cleavage method to release the peptide. Choose a solubility‑enhancing carrier and optimize expression conditions for best yield.

Summary

The paper explains how to make antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37 in bacteria, using fusion tags to keep the bacteria alive and then cutting the tag off to get the pure peptide. It’s a review of methods, not a new experiment, but it gives a clear overview of the steps needed for large‑scale production.

Abstract

Antimicrobial peptides are of great interest due to their potential application as novel antibiotics. Large quantities of highly purified peptides are required to meet the needs of basic research and clinical trials. Compared with isolation from natural sources and chemical synthesis, recombinant approach offers the most cost-effective means for large-scale peptide manufacture. Among the systems available for heterologous protein production, Escherichia coli has been the most widely used host. Antimicrobial peptides produced in E. coli are often expressed as fusion proteins, a strategy necessary to mask these peptides' lethal effect towards the host and protect them from proteolytic degradation. The present article reviews commonly used fusion partners (e.g., solubility-enhancing, aggregation-promoting and self-cleavable carriers, etc.), cleavage methods and optimization options for antimicrobial peptides production in E. coli. In addition, the various approaches developed to generate recombinant human antimicrobial peptide LL-37, which offer excellent examples demonstrating effective production strategies, were briefly discussed.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-08-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.pep.2011.08.001

Citations

290

References

94