NMR structure of the cathelicidin-derived human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 in dodecylphosphocholine micelles.
Porcelli. Fernando F; Verardi. Raffaello R; Shi. Lei L; Henzler-Wildman. Katherine A KA; Ramamoorthy. Ayyalusamy A; Veglia. Gianluigi G
Key Findings
- LL‑37 adopts a helix‑break‑helix shape in membrane mimics
- The C‑terminal helix is more stable and protected than the N‑terminal part
- LL‑37 sits on the surface of micelles with its hydrophilic face outward, supporting a carpet‑like antimicrobial mechanism
Practical Outcomes
- Knowing LL‑37’s membrane‑surface orientation suggests that formulations mimicking lipid environments may boost its activity. It also points to specific regions (like the stable C‑terminal helix) as targets for designing more potent analogs, though the paper doesn’t give direct dosing advice.
Summary
The study shows that the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 folds into two linked helices when it sits on membrane‑like surfaces, with the ends floppy and the middle part tightly packed. It lies flat on the membrane, exposing its water‑loving side while burying the oily side, supporting a “carpet” style of killing cells rather than punching holes. This structural insight helps explain how LL‑37 works and can guide the design of better versions or delivery methods.
Abstract
LL-37 is the only cathelicidin-derived polypeptide found in humans. Its eclectic function makes this peptide one of the most intriguing chemical defense agents, with crucial roles in moderating inflammation, promoting wound healing, and boosting the human immune system. LL-37 kills both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells through physical interaction with cell membranes. In order to study its active conformation in membranes, we have reconstituted LL-37 into dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles and determined its three-dimensional structure. We found that, under our experimental conditions, this peptide adopts a helix-break-helix conformation. Both the N- and C-termini are unstructured and solvent exposed. The N-terminal helical domain is more dynamic, while the C-terminal helix is more solvent protected and structured (high density of NOEs, slow H/D exchange). When it interacts with DPC, LL-37 is adsorbed on the surface of the micelle with the hydrophilic face exposed to the water phase and the hydrophobic face buried in the micelle hydrocarbon region. The break between the helices is positioned at K12 and is probably stabilized by a hydrophobic cluster formed by I13, F17, and I20 in addition to a salt bridge between K12 and E16. These results support the proposed nonpore carpet-like mechanism of action, in agreement with the solid-state NMR studies, and pave the way for understanding the function of the mature LL-37 at the atomic level.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-04-26T00:00:00.000Z
10.1021/bi702036s
170
57