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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2008 pubmed 68 citations

Host defence peptide LL-37 induces IL-6 expression in human bronchial epithelial cells by activation of the NF-kappaB signaling pathway.

Pistolic. Jelena J; Cosseau. Celine C; Li. Yuexin Y; Yu. Jie Jessie JJ; Filewod. Niall C J NC; Gellatly. Shaan S; Rehaume. Linda M LM; Bowdish. Dawn M E DM; Hancock. Robert E W RE

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 causes dose‑ and time‑dependent release of IL‑6, CXCL‑1, and CXCL‑8 from bronchial epithelial cells
  • The increase in IL‑6 is driven by activation of the NF‑kappaB signaling pathway
  • LL‑37 amplifies flagellin‑triggered cytokine production, suggesting it enhances TLR5‑mediated immune responses

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, using LL‑37 (e.g., as an inhaled supplement) could provoke airway inflammation, which may be counterproductive for long‑term health goals. It might be useful short‑term to boost immune defenses against infections, but caution is needed to avoid chronic inflammatory side effects.

Summary

The study shows that the natural peptide LL‑37, when applied to human airway cells, ramps up inflammation signals like IL‑6 by turning on the NF‑kappaB pathway. This means LL‑37 can boost immune activity in the lungs but also may cause unwanted inflammation if used too much or in the wrong way.

Abstract

LL-37, the only member of the cathelicidin family of cationic host defence peptides in humans, has been shown to mediate multiple immunomodulatory effects and as such is thought to be an important component of innate immune responses. A growing body of evidence indicates that LL-37 affects lung mucosal responses to pathogens through altered regulation of cell migration, proliferation, wound healing and cell apoptosis. These functions are consistent with LL-37 playing a role in regulating lung epithelial inflammatory responses; however, that role has not been clearly defined. In this report we have demonstrated that host defence peptide LL-37 induced cytokine (IL-6) and chemokine (CXCL-1/GRO-alpha and CXCL-8/IL-8) release from human bronchial epithelial cells. It was demonstrated that LL-37-mediated IL-6 release was time and dose dependent and that LL-37 up-regulated this pleiotropic cytokine at the transcriptional level. Using specific inhibitors it was shown that NF-kappaB signaling led to the LL-37-stimulated production of IL-6. LL-37 stimulation of airway epithelial cells activated NF-kappaB signaling, as demonstrated by the phosphorylation and degradation of Ikappa-Balpha, and consequent nuclear translocation of p65 and p50 NF-kappaB subunits. Furthermore this host defence peptide augmented flagellin-mediated cytokine production, indicating that LL-37 likely modulates Toll-like receptor 5-mediated responses.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

Date

2008-11-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1159/000171533

Citations

68

References

102