The cathelicidin LL-37 activates human mast cells and is degraded by mast cell tryptase: counter-regulation by CXCL4.
Schiemann. Florian F; Brandt. Ernst E; Gross. Roland R; Lindner. Buko B; Mittelstädt. Jessica J; Sommerhoff. Christian P CP; Schulmistrat. Jan J; Petersen. Frank F
Key Findings
- LL‑37 at normal body levels causes human lung mast cells to degranulate
- Mast cell beta‑tryptase rapidly cleaves LL‑37, eliminating its antimicrobial and LPS‑neutralizing activity
- CXCL4 shields LL‑37 from tryptase by destabilizing the enzyme’s tetramer structure
Practical Outcomes
- Using LL‑37 as a supplement may provoke mast cell‑driven inflammation and be quickly inactivated, so dosing alone is unlikely to be effective. If one wants to preserve LL‑37 activity, co‑administering a CXCL4‑mimicking strategy might help, though such approaches are not yet established for human use. Caution is advised when considering LL‑37 for health‑boosting protocols.
Summary
The study shows that the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can trigger mast cells to release their contents, which may cause inflammation, and that mast cells quickly break down LL‑37 so it loses its antimicrobial and anti‑LPS effects. A platelet protein called CXCL4 can protect LL‑37 from this breakdown, but it does so by messing with the mast cell enzyme rather than directly blocking it.
Abstract
The cathelicidin LL-37 represents a potent antimicrobial and cell-stimulating agent, most abundantly expressed in peripheral organs such as lung and skin during inflammation. Because mast cells (MC) overtake prominent immunomodulatory roles in these organs, we wondered whether interactions exist between MC and LL-37. In this study, we show for the first time to our knowledge that physiological concentrations of LL-37 induce degranulation in purified human lung MC. Intriguingly, as a consequence LL-37 rapidly undergoes limited cleavage by a released protease. The enzyme was identified as beta-tryptase by inhibitor studies and by comparison to the recombinant protease. Examining the resulting LL-37 fragments for their functional activity, we found that none of the typical capacities of intact LL-37, i.e., MC degranulation, bactericidal activity, and neutralization of LPS, were retained. Conversely, we found that another inflammatory protein, the platelet-derived chemokine CXCL4, protects LL-37 from cleavage by beta-tryptase. Interestingly, CXCL4 did not act as a direct enzyme inhibitor, but destabilized active tetrameric beta-tryptase by antagonizing the heparin component required for the integrity of the tetramer. Altogether our results suggest that interaction of LL-37 and MC initiates an effective feedback loop to limit cathelicidin activity during inflammation, whereas CXCL4 may represent a physiological counter-regulator of beta-tryptase activity.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-07-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.4049/jimmunol.0803587
57
57