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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2011 pubmed 46 citations

IFN-α is constitutively expressed in the human thymus, but not in peripheral lymphoid organs.

Colantonio. Arnaud D AD; Epeldegui. Marta M; Jesiak. Maria M; Jachimowski. Loes L; Blom. Bianca B; Uittenbogaart. Christel H CH

Key Findings

  • IFN‑α is constitutively expressed in the human thymus, not just during infection.
  • Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) in the thymus produce the highest levels of IFN‑α.
  • LL‑37 combined with eukaryotic nucleic acids can stimulate thymic pDCs to secrete IFN‑α, leading to increased MxA expression in thymocytes.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, the findings are not directly actionable—there’s no dosage, supplement protocol, or clear health benefit described. The work mainly deepens basic understanding of how LL‑37 might influence immune signaling in the thymus, which could inform future research but doesn’t translate into immediate self‑experimentation guidance.

Summary

The study shows that a protein called IFN‑α is naturally made in the human thymus (a gland that trains immune cells) even when there’s no infection. A special immune cell type (pDC) makes the most IFN‑α, and a molecule called LL‑37, when it binds to DNA, can trigger these cells to release more IFN‑α, which then activates other immune cells.

Abstract

Type I interferons have been typically studied for their effects in the context of bacterial or viral infections. However in this report, we provide evidence that Interferon-alpha (IFN-α) expressing cells are present in the thymus in the absence of infection. We show that pDC express the highest level of IFN-α and that MxA, which is exclusively expressed after engagement of the type I IFN receptor by IFN-α/β, is expressed in normal fetal and post-natal thymus, but not in the periphery. The highest level of MxA is expressed in mature thymocytes and pDC located in the medulla and at the cortico-medullary junction. The anti-microbial peptide LL-37, which is expressed in the thymus, when complexed with eukaryotic nucleic acids, induces the secretion of IFN-α by thymic pDC. This results in the upregulation of MxA expression in responsive thymocytes. We propose that the secretion of IFN-α in the thymus may function to regulate the rate of T cell development and modulate the requirements for the selection of developing T cells.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-08-31T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0024252

Citations

46

References

56