Dual functions of the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37-target membrane perturbation and host cell cargo delivery.
Zhang. Xuan X; Oglęcka. Kamila K; Sandgren. Staffan S; Belting. Mattias M; Esbjörner. Elin K EK; Nordén. Bengt B; Gräslund. Astrid A
Key Findings
- LL-37 quickly leaks contents from membranes that contain negatively‑charged lipids (like many bacteria) but not from neutral POPC membranes
- Adding cholesterol, which is common in human cell membranes, reduces LL-37’s membrane‑disrupting effect
- LL-37 can act as a cell‑penetrating peptide, delivering non‑covalently attached nucleic acids into eukaryotic cells
Practical Outcomes
- The findings hint that LL-37 could be explored as a natural antimicrobial and as a delivery vehicle for genetic material, but biohackers would need to wait for more data on safe doses, formulation, and potential side‑effects before trying it in DIY protocols.
Summary
LL-37 is a natural human peptide that can punch holes in bacterial‑like membranes while sparing normal cell membranes, especially because cholesterol in our cells blocks its action. It also can slip into our cells and carry attached DNA or RNA pieces inside. The study shows these two roles but doesn’t give dosing or safety guidelines for everyday use.
Abstract
The mechanisms behind target vs. host cell recognition of the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 remain ill-defined. Here, we have investigated the membrane disruption capacity of LL-37 using large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) composed of varying mixtures of POPC, POPG and cholesterol to mimic target and host membranes respectively. We show that LL-37 is unable to induce leakage of entrapped calcein from zwitterionic POPC LUVs, whereas leakage from LUVs partially composed of POPG is fast and efficient. In accordance with typical antimicrobial peptide behavior, cholesterol diminished LL-37 induced leakage. By using linear dichroism and flow oriented LUVs, we found that LL-37 orients with the axis of its induced α-helix parallel to the membrane surface in POPC:POPG (7:3) LUVs. In the same system, we also observed a time-dependent increase of the parallel α-helix LD signal on timescales corresponding to the leakage kinetics. The increased LD may be connected to a peptide translocation step, giving rise to mass balance across the membrane. This could end the leakage process before it is complete, similar to what we have observed. Confocal microscopy studies of eukaryotic cells show that LL-37 is able to mediate the cell delivery of non-covalently linked fluorescent oligonucleotides, in agreement with earlier studies on delivery of plasmid DNA (Sandgren et al., J. Biol. Chem. 279 (2004) 17951). These observations highlight the potential dual functions of LL-37 as an antimicrobial agent against bacterial target cells and a cell-penetrating peptide that can deliver nucleic acids into the host cells.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-12-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbamem.2009.12.011
115
35