The role of antimicrobial peptides in human skin and in skin infectious diseases.
Schittek. Birgit B; Paulmann. Maren M; Senyürek. Ilknur I; Steffen. Heiko H
Key Findings
- Low LL-37 levels are linked to weaker skin defenses in atopic dermatitis, burns, and chronic wounds
- High LL-37 levels in psoriasis and rosacea correlate with better protection against skin infections
- Topical use of LL-37 or similar peptides shows promise as an anti‑infective and immune‑modulating skin treatment
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the takeaway is that skin products containing LL-37 or peptide‑mimics might enhance antimicrobial protection and aid wound healing. However, optimal formulations, dosages, and safety data are still lacking, so any experimentation should start with low concentrations and careful monitoring.
Summary
LL-37 is a natural protein in our skin that helps kill germs and calm inflammation. People with eczema, burns or chronic wounds have less of it, while those with psoriasis or acne have more, which seems to protect them from infections. This suggests that boosting LL-37 on the skin could help prevent or treat infections and improve wound healing, but the exact way to do it isn’t worked out yet.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides or proteins (AMPs) represent an ancient and efficient innate defense mechanism which protects interfaces from infection with pathogenic microorganisms. In human skin AMPs are produced mainly by keratinocytes, neutrophils, sebocytes or sweat glands and are either expressed constitutively or after an inflammatory stimulus. In several human skin diseases there is an inverse correlation between severity of the disease and the level of AMP production. Skin lesions of patients with atopic dermatitis show a diminished expression of the beta-defensins and the cathelicidin LL-37. Furthermore, these patients have a reduced amount of the AMP dermcidin in their sweat which correlates with an impaired innate defense of human skin in vivo. In addition, decreased levels of AMPs are associated with burns and chronic wounds. In contrast, overexpression of AMPs can lead to increased protection against skin infections as seen in patients with psoriasis and rosacea, inflammatory skin-diseases which rarely result in superinfection. In other skin diseases, e.g. in patients with acne vulgaris, increased levels of AMPs are often found in inflamed or infected skin areas indicating a role of these peptides in the protection from infection. These data indicate that AMPs have a therapeutical potential as topical anti-infectives in several skin diseases. The broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity, the low incidence of bacterial resistance and their function as immunomodulatory agents are attractive features of AMPs for their clinical use.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-08-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.2174/1871526510808030135
114