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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2010 pubmed

Permeabilization of fungal hyphae by the plant defensin NaD1 occurs through a cell wall-dependent process.

van der Weerden. Nicole L NL; Hancock. Robert E W RE; Anderson. Marilyn A MA

Key Findings

  • NaD1 permeabilizes fungal cells only when the cell wall is present
  • NaD1 and a bovine peptide can enter fungal cells and speed up death
  • LL‑37 was used as a reference peptide that likely works by membrane disruption

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY health enthusiasts, this paper doesn’t change how you’d use LL‑37. It confirms LL‑37’s membrane‑targeting action but offers no new dosing or protocol advice.

Summary

This study looked at how a plant protein called NaD1 kills fungus and compared it to other antimicrobial peptides, including the human peptide LL‑37. It found that NaD1 needs the fungus’s cell wall to work, while LL‑37 is thought to act mainly by breaking cell membranes, but the paper didn’t reveal any new tricks for using LL‑37 in humans.

Abstract

The antifungal activity of the plant defensin NaD1 involves specific interaction with the fungal cell wall, followed by permeabilization of the plasma membrane and entry of NaD1 into the cytoplasm. Prior to this study, the role of membrane permeabilization in the activity of NaD1, as well as the relevance of cell wall binding, had not been investigated. To address this, the permeabilization of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. vasinfectum hyphae by NaD1 was investigated and compared with that by other antimicrobial peptides, including the cecropin-melittin hybrid peptide CP-29, the bovine peptide BMAP-28, and the human peptide LL-37, which are believed to act largely through membrane disruption. NaD1 appeared to permeabilize cells via a novel mechanism that required the presence of the fungal cell wall. NaD1 and Bac2A, a linear variant of the bovine peptide bactenecin, were able to enter the cytoplasm of treated hyphae, indicating that cell death is accelerated by interaction with intracellular targets.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-09-22T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1074/jbc.m110.134882