Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2010 pubmed 13 citations

Intestinal antimicrobial gene expression: impact of micronutrients in malnourished adults during a randomized trial.

Dhaliwal. Winnie W; Shawa. Tamara T; Khanam. Moriam M; Jagatiya. Poonam P; Simuyandi. Michelo M; Ndulo. Namwiinga N; Bevins. Charles L CL; Sanderson. Ian R IR; Kelly. Paul P

Key Findings

  • Micronutrient pills did not affect LL‑37 gene expression in the intestine.
  • In malnourished adults (BMI ≤ 18.5), HD5 mRNA rose by about 0.8 log units with micronutrient supplementation.
  • During diarrhea, HD5 dropped in placebo recipients but not in those taking micronutrients.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study suggests that multi‑micronutrient supplementation may support certain gut antimicrobial defenses in underweight individuals, but it offers no actionable insight for using LL‑37 itself. Focus on overall nutrition rather than LL‑37 supplementation for gut health.

Summary

A study in Zambian adults found that taking a daily multi‑micronutrient pill didn’t change gut levels of the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, but it did boost another peptide (HD5) in people who were underweight. During diarrhea, HD5 fell in the placebo group but stayed stable with the supplement. There’s no direct evidence here that LL‑37 supplementation helps gut health.

Abstract

Because both micronutrients and antimicrobial peptides protect against diarrhea, we looked for an effect on intestinal antimicrobial peptide gene expression during a randomized controlled trial of multiple micronutrient (MM) supplementation. Consenting adults (n=287) in Lusaka, Zambia, were randomized to receive a daily MM supplement or placebo and were followed up for 3.3 years, with a crossover after 2 years. Intestinal biopsy samples were obtained at annual intervals, and messenger RNA of the intestinal antimicrobial peptides human alpha defensin (HD) 5, HD6, human beta-defensin (hBD) 1, hBD2, and LL-37 were quantified by real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Samples were also obtained during diarrhea episodes and after convalescence. There was no effect overall of treatment allocation. However, in malnourished adults (body mass index < or =18.5), HD5 mRNA was increased by 0.8 log transcripts/microg total RNA in MM recipients, compared with HD5 mRNA in placebo recipients (P=.007). During diarrhea, HD5 expression was reduced by 0.8 log transcripts in placebo recipients (P=.02) but was not reduced in MM recipients, nor was it reduced after the crossover. Correlations between HD5 and nutritional status were found that were sex-specific but not explained by serum leptin or adiponectin concentrations. Micronutrient supplementation was associated with up-regulation of HD5 only in malnourished adults. Interactions between antimicrobial gene expression and nutritional status may help to explain the increased risk of infection in individuals with malnutrition.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-09-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1086/655903

Citations

13

References

40