Injury downregulates the expression of the human cathelicidin protein hCAP18/LL-37 in atopic dermatitis.
Mallbris. Lotus L; Carlén. Lina L; Wei. Tianling T; Heilborn. Johan J; Nilsson. Margareta Frohm MF; Granath. Fredrik F; Ståhle. Mona M
Key Findings
- LL‑37 (hCAP18) mRNA is lower in atopic dermatitis lesions compared to psoriasis and healthy skin.
- Injury or scratching suppresses the usual injury‑induced rise of LL‑37 in eczema lesions.
- Vitamin D treatment still effectively increases LL‑37 expression in both lesional and non‑lesional eczema skin.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, maintaining adequate vitamin D (through sunlight, diet, or supplements) may help support skin antimicrobial defenses in eczema. Avoiding excessive scratching or skin injury can prevent the suppression of LL‑37. Topical vitamin D analogs could be explored as a strategy to boost LL‑37 locally in atopic skin.
Summary
In eczema (atopic dermatitis), the skin’s natural antibiotic protein LL‑37 is normally low in rash areas and, unlike healthy skin, doesn’t rise after the skin is scratched or injured. However, vitamin D can still boost LL‑37 production even in these inflamed patches, meaning vitamin D helps keep the skin’s antimicrobial defense working despite eczema.
Abstract
Reduced production of antimicrobial peptides was proposed to contribute to susceptibility for skin infections in atopic dermatitis (AD). Focusing on the human cathelicidin protein, hCAP18, the aim of the present study was to explore whether reduced hCAP18 expression is a constitutive trait in AD and if established inducers affect the expression of hCAP18 in the skin of AD. First, we compared levels of hCAP18 mRNA between lesional skin in AD and psoriasis and verified significantly lower expression of hCAP18 mRNA in AD. In non-lesional skin, however, there was no difference between AD, psoriasis and healthy, indicating that there is no constitutive defect in the production of hCAP18 in AD patients. In healthy skin, hCAP18 was reported to be rapidly induced following wounding and here we verified this pattern in healthy controls and in psoriasis. In AD lesions, however, the expression of hCAP18 mRNA was markedly suppressed following wounding. Obviously, the inflammation in AD lesions neutralizes the expected induction of hCAP18 and even induces suppression. Notably, the mechanism to upregulate hCAP18 following vitamin D treatment was functional in lesional as well as in non-lesional AD indicating that the CAMP gene is normally regulated in this respect. In addition, cultured primary keratinocytes from non-lesional skin of psoriasis, AD and healthy skin, upregulated hCAP18mRNA following treatment with vitamin D. Itching is a hallmark of AD and scratching inevitably injures the skin. Failure to upregulate hCAP18 in eczema following injury is likely to affect antimicrobial protection and tissue repair in AD.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-07-23T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1600-0625.2009.00918.x
67
26