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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2010 pubmed 45 citations

Flagellin-induced corneal antimicrobial peptide production and wound repair involve a novel NF-kappaB-independent and EGFR-dependent pathway.

Gao. Nan N; Kumar. Ashok A; Jyot. Jeevan J; Yu. Fu-Shin FS

Key Findings

  • A flagellin mutant (L94A) that can’t activate NF‑kB still triggers EGFR signaling and promotes wound closure in corneal tissue.
  • LL‑37 and another antimicrobial peptide (hBD2) are released even when the inflammatory NF‑kB pathway is blocked.
  • The separation of antimicrobial peptide production from inflammation suggests it’s possible to boost innate defenses without causing irritation.

Practical Outcomes

  • Topical or eye‑drop formulations containing flagellin or similar TLR5‑activating compounds might enhance LL‑37 levels and speed up corneal healing while keeping inflammation low. For biohackers, this points to exploring flagellin‑derived agents for mucosal or skin health, but dosing and safety need careful testing before real‑world use.

Summary

The study shows that a modified version of the bacterial protein flagellin can boost the body’s natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and help heal corneal wounds without triggering the usual inflammatory response, meaning you could get protective benefits without side‑effects like swelling.

Abstract

The bacterial protein flagellin plays a major role in stimulating mucosal surface innate immune response to bacterial infection and uniquely induces profound cytoprotection against pathogens, chemicals, and radiation. This study sought to determine signaling pathways responsible for the flagellin-induced inflammatory and cytoprotective effects on human corneal epithelial cells (HCECs). Flagellin purified from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (strain PAK) or live bacteria were used to challenge cultured HCECs. The activation of signaling pathways was assessed with Western blot, and the secretion of cytokine/chemokine and production of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) were measured with ELISA and dot blot, respectively. Effects of flagellin on wound healing were assessed in cultured porcine corneas. L94A (a site mutation in TLR5 binding region) flagellin and PAK expressing L94A flagellin were unable to stimulate NF-kappaB activation, but were potent in eliciting EGFR signaling in a TGF-alpha-related pathway in HCECs. Concomitant with the lack of NF-kappaB activation, L94A flagellin was ineffective in inducing IL-6 and IL-8 production in HCECs. Surprisingly, the secretion of two inducible AMPs, LL-37 and hBD2, was not affected by L94A mutation. Similar to wild-type flagellin, L94A induced epithelial wound closure in cultured porcine cornea through maintaining EGFR-mediated signaling. Our data suggest that inflammatory response mediated by NF-kappaB can be uncoupled from epithelial innate defense machinery (i.e., AMP expression) and major epithelial proliferation/repair pathways mediated by EGFR, and that flagellin and its derivatives may have broad therapeutic applications in cytoprotection and in controlling infection in the cornea and other mucosal tissues.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-02-26T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0009351

Citations

45

References

64