Innate defense regulator peptide 1018 in wound healing and wound infection.
Steinstraesser. Lars L; Hirsch. Tobias T; Schulte. Matthias M; Kueckelhaus. Maximilian M; Jacobsen. Frank F; Mersch. Evgenija A EA; Stricker. Ingo I; Afacan. Nicole N; Jenssen. Havard H; Hancock. Robert E W RE; Kindrachuk. Jason J
Key Findings
- IDR-1018 is significantly less cytotoxic to cells than LL‑37 or another peptide (HB‑107).
- IDR-1018 increases fibroblast cellular respiration in a dose‑dependent manner.
- In animal models, IDR-1018 speeds up wound closure in non‑diabetic and infected wounds, but not in diabetic wounds, and it does not lower bacterial counts.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, the study suggests that using LL‑37 for wound healing may carry higher cell toxicity and limited benefit, especially in diabetic contexts. The synthetic IDR-1018 shows promise, but it isn’t commercially available, so the findings mainly serve as safety and efficacy reference rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol.
Summary
A lab-made peptide called IDR-1018 helps wounds heal faster in healthy animals and is less toxic to cells than the natural human peptide LL‑37. It works without killing bacteria and boosts fibroblast activity, but it doesn’t help heal diabetic wounds and doesn’t reduce infection levels.
Abstract
Innate defense regulators (IDRs) are synthetic immunomodulatory versions of natural host defense peptides (HDP). IDRs mediate protection against bacterial challenge in the absence of direct antimicrobial activity, representing a novel approach to anti-infective and anti-inflammatory therapy. Previously, we reported that IDR-1018 selectively induced chemokine responses and suppressed pro-inflammatory responses. As there has been an increasing appreciation for the ability of HDPs to modulate complex immune processes, including wound healing, we characterized the wound healing activities of IDR-1018 in vitro. Further, we investigated the efficacy of IDR-1018 in diabetic and non-diabetic wound healing models. In all experiments, IDR-1018 was compared to the human HDP LL-37 and HDP-derived wound healing peptide HB-107. IDR-1018 was significantly less cytotoxic in vitro as compared to either LL-37 or HB-107. Furthermore, administration of IDR-1018 resulted in a dose-dependent increase in fibroblast cellular respiration. In vivo, IDR-1018 demonstrated significantly accelerated wound healing in S. aureus infected porcine and non-diabetic but not in diabetic murine wounds. However, no significant differences in bacterial colonization were observed. Our investigation demonstrates that in addition to previously reported immunomodulatory activities IDR-1018 promotes wound healing independent of direct antibacterial activity. Interestingly, these effects were not observed in diabetic wounds. It is anticipated that the wound healing activities of IDR-1018 can be attributed to modulation of host immune pathways that are suppressed in diabetic wounds and provide further evidence of the multiple immunomodulatory activities of IDR-1018.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-08-06T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0039373
144
43