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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2011 pubmed 74 citations

The bone marrow-expressed antimicrobial cationic peptide LL-37 enhances the responsiveness of hematopoietic stem progenitor cells to an SDF-1 gradient and accelerates their engraftment after transplantation.

Wu. W W; Kim. C H CH; Liu. R R; Kucia. M M; Marlicz. W W; Greco. N N; Ratajczak. J J; Laughlin. M J MJ; Ratajczak. M Z MZ

Key Findings

  • LL-37 boosts the chemotactic response of mouse and human hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells to low‑level SDF‑1 gradients.
  • Pre‑treating bone‑marrow cells with LL-37 improves their adhesion, actin polymerization, and MAPK signaling, leading to faster engraftment in mice.
  • The benefit depends on CXCR4 moving into membrane lipid rafts, not on LL-37 binding to its classic receptor.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers interested in stem‑cell based longevity interventions, LL-37 could be explored as an ex‑vivo priming additive to improve transplant efficiency, especially for cord‑blood grafts where cell numbers are low. However, applying this requires lab‑grade cell handling and validation, so it’s not a ready‑to‑use supplement but a promising protocol tweak for advanced users.

Summary

LL-37, a natural antimicrobial peptide made by bone‑marrow cells, can “prime” stem cells before they are transplanted, making them move toward the body’s signal (SDF‑1) more efficiently and stick better. In mice, this priming sped up recovery of blood cells after a transplant by about 3‑5 days. The effect works by shuffling the CXCR4 receptor into special membrane areas, not by the peptide’s usual receptor.

Abstract

We report that the bone marrow (BM) stroma-released LL-37, a member of the cathelicidin family of antimicrobial peptides, primes/increases the responsiveness of murine and human hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs) to an α-chemokine stromal-derived factor-1 (SDF-1) gradient. Accordingly, LL-37 is upregulated in irradiated BM cells and enhances the chemotactic responsiveness of hematopoietic progenitors from all lineages to a low physiological SDF-1 gradient as well as increasing their (i) adhesiveness, (ii) SDF-1-mediated actin polymerization and (iii) MAPK(p42/44) phosphorylation. Mice transplanted with BM cells ex vivo primed by LL-37 showed accelerated recovery of platelet and neutrophil counts by ∼3-5 days compared with mice transplanted with unprimed control cells. These priming effects were not mediated by LL-37 binding to its receptor and depended instead on the incorporation of the CXCR4 receptor into membrane lipid rafts. We propose that LL-37, which has primarily antimicrobial functions and is harmless to mammalian cells, could be clinically applied to accelerate engraftment as an ex vivo priming agent for transplanted human HSPCs. This novel approach would be particularly important in cord blood transplantations, where the number of HSCs available is usually limited.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-09-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/leu.2011.252

Citations

74

References

34