Human antimicrobial proteins in ear wax.
Schwaab. M M; Gurr. A A; Neumann. A A; Dazert. S S; Minovi. A A
Key Findings
- All ten studied antimicrobial peptides, including LL‑37, are present in human ear wax
- Some peptides appear to be cell‑bound within the wax
- The antimicrobial proteins likely protect the ear canal from bacterial and fungal infections
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, the finding is mainly interesting for ear health rather than systemic benefits. It suggests that maintaining ear hygiene is important, but there are no new dosage or supplement protocols to apply.
Summary
Researchers found that ear wax contains a bunch of natural antimicrobial proteins, including LL‑37, which help keep the ear canal free from infections. Some of these proteins stick to cells in the wax, and together they act as a local defense system. This knowledge could lead to new ear‑specific treatments, but it doesn’t change how you take supplements or affect overall health directly.
Abstract
The external auditory canal is vulnerable to bacterial infections, but little is known about thechemical compositions of ear wax regarding antimicrobial peptides. We, therefore, studied the proteinconcentrations of ten well-known human antimicrobial peptides from ear wax.Twenty ear wax samples from healthy individuals were analysed using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to determine theprotein concentrations of the antimicrobial peptides hBD1-3, lactoferrin, LL-37, BPI, hSLPI and HNP1-3. All ten antimicrobial peptides are present in ear wax. Some of these proteins seem to be merelycell-bound in ear wax. Antimicrobial peptides in ear wax prevent bacteria and fungi from causing infections inthe external auditory canal. The role and importance of these proteins for the blind-ending ear externalcanal is discussed. If this local defence system fails, infections of the external auditory canal may result.The knowledge about the presence of antimicrobial peptides in cerumen may lead to new concepts ofthe local treatment of external auditory canal diseases in the future.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-02-06T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s10096-011-1185-2
23
79