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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2009 pubmed 289 citations

The pro-inflammatory peptide LL-37 promotes ovarian tumor progression through recruitment of multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells.

Coffelt. Seth B SB; Marini. Frank C FC; Watson. Keri K; Zwezdaryk. Kevin J KJ; Dembinski. Jennifer L JL; LaMarca. Heather L HL; Tomchuck. Suzanne L SL; Honer zu Bentrup. Kerstin K; Danka. Elizabeth S ES; Henkle. Sarah L SL; Scandurro. Aline B AB

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 is over‑produced in ovarian, breast and lung cancers and promotes tumor growth
  • Neutralizing LL‑37 in mice reduces recruitment of mesenchymal stromal cells and slows tumor growth
  • LL‑37‑stimulated stromal cells release cytokines and VEGF that boost blood‑vessel formation

Practical Outcomes

  • For longevity‑focused biohackers, there’s no direct way to use LL‑37 for health benefits; instead, strategies that keep LL‑37 levels low (e.g., reducing chronic inflammation) may be safer. The research does not provide a supplement protocol or dosage, only highlights a potential risk of high LL‑37 activity in cancer contexts.

Summary

The study shows that the natural peptide LL‑37, which is higher in some cancers, helps ovarian tumors grow by pulling in special stem‑like cells that make blood vessels and inflammation. Blocking LL‑37 in mice stopped these cells from entering the tumor and slowed its growth.

Abstract

Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells or multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have been shown to engraft into the stroma of several tumor types, where they contribute to tumor progression and metastasis. However, the chemotactic signals mediating MSC migration to tumors remain poorly understood. Previous studies have shown that LL-37 (leucine, leucine-37), the C-terminal peptide of human cationic antimicrobial protein 18, stimulates the migration of various cell types and is overexpressed in ovarian, breast, and lung cancers. Although there is evidence to support a pro-tumorigenic role for LL-37, the function of the peptide in tumors remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate that neutralization of LL-37 in vivo significantly reduces the engraftment of MSCs into ovarian tumor xenografts, resulting in inhibition of tumor growth as well as disruption of the fibrovascular network. Migration and invasion experiments conducted in vitro indicated that the LL-37-mediated migration of MSCs to tumors likely occurs through formyl peptide receptor like-1. To assess the response of MSCs to the LL-37-rich tumor microenvironment, conditioned medium from LL-37-treated MSCs was assessed and found to contain increased levels of several cytokines and pro-angiogenic factors compared with controls, including IL-1 receptor antagonist, IL-6, IL-10, CCL5, VEGF, and matrix metalloproteinase-2. Similarly, Matrigel mixed with LL-37, MSCs, or the combination of the two resulted in a significant number of vascular channels in nude mice. These data indicate that LL-37 facilitates ovarian tumor progression through recruitment of progenitor cell populations to serve as pro-angiogenic factor-expressing tumor stromal cells.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-02-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1073/pnas.0900244106

Citations

289

References

38