The innate defense regulator peptides IDR-HH2, IDR-1002, and IDR-1018 modulate human neutrophil functions.
Niyonsaba. François F; Madera. Laurence L; Afacan. Nicole N; Okumura. Ko K; Ogawa. Hideoki H; Hancock. Robert E W RE
Key Findings
- IDR peptides increase neutrophil adhesion to endothelial cells via β2‑integrins and boost migration and chemokine release.
- They raise the secretion of innate antimicrobial peptides, including human α‑defensins and LL‑37, enhancing bacterial killing.
- The peptides suppress LPS‑induced neutrophil degranulation, reactive oxygen species, and pro‑inflammatory cytokines (TNF‑α, IL‑10).
- Activation of the MAPK pathway is required for the chemokine‑producing effects of IDR peptides.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑directed health optimizers, the data suggest that IDR‑type molecules could be explored as immune‑boosting agents that increase LL‑37 and reduce inflammation. However, these peptides are experimental and not yet available for human dosing, so any real‑world protocol would be speculative and require further safety and efficacy testing.
Summary
The study shows that three synthetic peptides (IDR‑HH2, IDR‑1002, IDR‑1018) can change how human neutrophils behave: they stick better to blood‑vessel walls, move toward signals, release more antimicrobial proteins like LL‑37, and kill bacteria more effectively, while also dialing down harmful inflammation.
Abstract
Although HDPs were originally hypothesized to act as antimicrobial agents, they also have been shown to broadly modulate the immune response through the activation of different cell types. We recently developed a series of novel, synthetic peptides, termed IDRs, which are conceptually based on a natural HDP, bovine bactenecin. We showed that IDR-1 and IDR-1002 protect the host against bacterial infections through the induction of chemokines. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of the IDRs on various functions of human neutrophils. Here, we demonstrated that IDR-HH2, IDR-1002, and IDR-1018 modulated the expression of neutrophil adhesion and activation markers. Moreover, these IDRs enhanced neutrophil adhesion to endothelial cells in a β₂ integrin-dependent manner and induced neutrophil migration and chemokine production. The IDR peptides also increased the release of the neutrophil-generated HDPs (antimicrobial), human α-defensins, and LL-37 and augmented neutrophil-mediated killing of Escherichia coli. Notably, the IDRs significantly suppressed LPS-mediated neutrophil degranulation, the release of ROS, and the production of the inflammatory cytokines TNF-α and IL-10, consistent with their ability to dampen inflammation. As evidenced by the inhibitory effects of MAPK-specific inhibitors, IDRs activated the MAPK pathway that was required for chemokine production. In conclusion, our study provides novel evidence regarding the contribution of the IDR peptides to the innate immune response through the modulation of neutrophil functions. The results described here may aid in the development of IDRs as novel, anti-infective and immunomodulatory agents.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-04-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1189/jlb.1012497
92
61