Host defense peptide LL-37 selectively reduces proinflammatory macrophage responses.
Brown. Kelly L KL; Poon. Grace F T GF; Birkenhead. Darlene D; Pena. Olga M OM; Falsafi. Reza R; Dahlgren. Claes C; Karlsson. Anna A; Bylund. Johan J; Hancock. Robert E W RE; Johnson. Pauline P
Key Findings
- LL-37 sharply lowers TNF‑α and nitric oxide release from LPS‑stimulated M1 (pro‑inflammatory) macrophages.
- The peptide does not impair essential macrophage functions such as bacterial killing, phagocytosis of dead cells, or arginase activity in M2 (anti‑inflammatory) macrophages.
- LL-37‑treated M1 macrophages showed increased ability to suppress tumor cell growth in vitro, and the anti‑inflammatory effect was strongest in lung (alveolar) macrophages, both in vitro and after intratracheal delivery in mice.
Practical Outcomes
- LL-37 could be explored as a targeted anti‑inflammatory agent that spares normal immune defenses, which may interest biohackers looking to modulate chronic inflammation. However, because it currently requires specialized delivery (e.g., intratracheal injection) and is not an approved supplement, the findings are more proof‑of‑concept than a ready‑to‑use protocol.
Summary
The human peptide LL-37 can dial down the inflammatory signals (especially TNF‑α) that activated macrophages produce, without stopping those cells from doing their normal jobs like killing bacteria or cleaning up dead cells. It also made the inflammatory macrophages better at slowing tumor cell growth in a dish.
Abstract
The human cathelicidin peptide, LL-37, is a host defense peptide with a wide range of immunomodulatory activities and modest direct antimicrobial properties. LL-37 can exert both pro- and anti-inflammatory effects and can modulate the proinflammatory responses of human peripheral blood monocytes and epithelial cells. In this study, we evaluated the effect of LL-37 on mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDM) and tissue macrophages in vitro and in vivo. LL-37 dramatically reduced TNF-α and NO levels produced by LPS and IFN-γ-polarized M1-BMDM and slightly reduced reactive oxygen species production by these cells. LL-37 did not affect the ability of IL-4-polarized M2-BMDM to upregulate arginase activity, although it did inhibit LPS-induced TNF-α secretion in these cells. LL-37 did not compromise the ability of M1-polarized BMDM to phagocytose and kill bacteria and did not affect the uptake of apoptotic neutrophils by M2-polarized BMDM. However, LL-37-treated M1-BMDM were more efficient at suppressing tumor growth in vitro. LL-37 significantly reduced LPS-induced TNF-α secretion in ex vivo alveolar macrophages, whereas its effect on peritoneal macrophages was much less dramatic. Effective inhibition of LPS-induced TNF-α secretion by alveolar macrophages also occurred in vivo when LL-37 was administered by intratracheal injection. This demonstrates a selective ability of LL-37 to decrease M1-BMDM, M2-BMDM, and tissue macrophage production of the proinflammatory cytokine TNF-α in response to LPS while leaving other crucial anti-inflammatory M1 and M2 macrophage functions unaltered.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-03-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.4049/jimmunol.1002508
162
44