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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2011 pubmed

Deletion of mtrC in Haemophilus ducreyi increases sensitivity to human antimicrobial peptides and activates the CpxRA regulon.

Rinker. Sherri D SD; Trombley. Michael P MP; Gu. Xiaoping X; Fortney. Kate R KR; Bauer. Margaret E ME

Key Findings

  • Deleting the mtrC gene makes H. ducreyi much more sensitive to LL‑37 and human beta‑defensins.
  • The MTR transporter provides proton‑motive‑force‑dependent resistance to LL‑37, independent of the CpxRA regulatory system.
  • Activation of the CpxRA regulon occurs in the mtrC mutant, but this regulon does not drive the observed peptide resistance.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research doesn’t change how you would use LL‑37 or related peptides for health purposes. It mainly informs microbiologists that bacteria can develop specific resistance mechanisms, meaning that simply adding LL‑37 isn’t a guaranteed way to fight infections. No direct dosage or protocol adjustments are suggested for personal use.

Summary

The study shows that a bacterium called Haemophilus ducreyi becomes more vulnerable to the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 when a specific gene (mtrC) is removed. This gene is part of a transporter that helps the bacteria resist LL‑37 and certain beta‑defensins. The resistance involves multiple bacterial systems, so LL‑37’s killing power isn’t due to a single factor.

Abstract

Haemophilus ducreyi resists killing by antimicrobial peptides encountered during human infection, including cathelicidin LL-37, α-defensins, and β-defensins. In this study, we examined the role of the proton motive force-dependent multiple transferable resistance (MTR) transporter in antimicrobial peptide resistance in H. ducreyi. We found a proton motive force-dependent effect on H. ducreyi's resistance to LL-37 and β-defensin HBD-3, but not α-defensin HNP-2. Deletion of the membrane fusion protein MtrC rendered H. ducreyi more sensitive to LL-37 and human β-defensins but had relatively little effect on α-defensin resistance. The mtrC mutant 35000HPmtrC exhibited phenotypic changes in outer membrane protein profiles, colony morphology, and serum sensitivity, which were restored to wild type by trans-complementation with mtrC. Similar phenotypes were reported in a cpxA mutant; activation of the two-component CpxRA regulator was confirmed by showing transcriptional effects on CpxRA-regulated genes in 35000HPmtrC. A cpxR mutant had wild-type levels of antimicrobial peptide resistance; a cpxA mutation had little effect on defensin resistance but led to increased sensitivity to LL-37. 35000HPmtrC was more sensitive than the cpxA mutant to LL-37, indicating that MTR contributed to LL-37 resistance independent of the CpxRA regulon. The CpxRA regulon did not affect proton motive force-dependent antimicrobial peptide resistance; however, 35000HPmtrC had lost proton motive force-dependent peptide resistance, suggesting that the MTR transporter promotes proton motive force-dependent resistance to LL-37 and human β-defensins. This is the first report of a β-defensin resistance mechanism in H. ducreyi and shows that LL-37 resistance in H. ducreyi is multifactorial.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-03-28T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1128/iai.01316-10