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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2010 pubmed 101 citations

Innate immunity to mycobacteria: vitamin D and autophagy.

Jo. Eun-Kyeong EK

Key Findings

  • Vitamin D3 stimulates production of LL‑37, the only human cathelicidin peptide.
  • LL‑37 and autophagy together enhance the killing of intracellular mycobacteria.
  • Autophagy links to other innate immune pathways like ubiquitin and inflammasomes, supporting overall infection resistance.

Practical Outcomes

  • Ensuring adequate vitamin D status may boost LL‑37 levels and autophagy, potentially improving resistance to mycobacterial infections. Biohackers can consider regular vitamin D testing and supplementation as part of a broader immune‑support strategy, though specific dosing for LL‑37 enhancement isn’t defined here.

Summary

This review explains how vitamin D helps the body make a natural antimicrobial peptide called LL‑37, which works together with a cellular recycling process called autophagy to fight tuberculosis‑type bacteria. It shows that boosting vitamin D could strengthen this innate defense, but it doesn’t give specific dosing or protocols.

Abstract

Autophagy is an ancient mechanism of protein degradation and a novel antimicrobial strategy. With respect to host defences against mycobacteria, autophagy plays a crucial role in antimycobacterial resistance, and contributes to immune surveillance of intracellular pathogens and vaccine efficacy. Vitamin D3 contributes to host immune responses against Mycobacterium tuberculosis through LL-37/hCAP-18, which is the only cathelicidin identified to date in humans. In this review, we discuss recent advances in our understanding of host immune strategies against mycobacteria, including vitamin D-mediated innate immunity and autophagy activation. This review also addresses our current understanding regarding the autophagy connection to principal innate machinery, such as ubiquitin- or inflammasome-involved pathways. Integrated dialog between autophagy and innate immunity may contribute to adequate host immune defences against mycobacterial infection.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-06-14T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1462-5822.2010.01491.x

Citations

101

References

81