Fungal allergens induce cathelicidin LL-37 expression in chronic rhinosinusitis patients in a nasal explant model.
Ooi. Eng Hooi EH; Wormald. Peter-John PJ; Carney. A Simon AS; James. Craig Lloyd CL; Tan. Lor Wai LW
Key Findings
- LL‑37 mRNA spikes (4‑6‑fold) in regular chronic sinusitis tissue after exposure to Aspergillus or Alternaria extracts
- LL‑37 protein in tissue rises with Alternaria in regular CRS but only with Aspergillus in eosinophilic CRS, and can drop with Alternaria in the eosinophilic type
- Higher doses of fungal extracts tend to lower the amount of LL‑37 released into the surrounding fluid
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, the results don’t translate into a usable protocol. It suggests that fungal exposure can modulate innate immune peptides in the nose differently depending on sinus disease subtype, but there’s no clear guidance for supplementation, dosing, or performance enhancement.
Summary
The study shows that a natural antimicrobial peptide called LL‑37 is turned on in the nose when people with chronic sinus inflammation are exposed to certain fungi, but the response differs between two sub‑types of the condition. In regular chronic sinusitis, LL‑37 levels rise with both Aspergillus and Alternaria fungi, while in the eosinophilic form the response is mixed and sometimes goes down. This is mainly a basic science finding about nasal immunity, not a direct health hack.
Abstract
Fungus is thought to play an important role in some subgroups of chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) patients with eosinophilic mucus (EMCRS). The cathelicidin LL-37 is an important innate defense peptide with antimicrobial activity but its responses in CRS and EMCRS patients have not been established. We investigated the innate immune responses of LL-37 in nasal tissue from CRS and EMCRS patients to fungal allergen challenge. The levels of LL-37 produced by nasal tissue and secreted in response to fungal allergen challenge were determined by a nasal tissue explant in vitro model. LL-37 mRNA and protein levels were quantified by real-time reverse-transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and immunoassay methods. LL-37 mRNA expression in CRS, but not EMCRS patients, is significantly upregulated by Aspergillus (mean fourfold increase) and Alternaria (mean sixfold increase) extracts in a dose-response manner (p < 0.001). LL-37 peptide levels in the nasal tissue from CRS patients are increased in response to Alternaria (p < 0.05). In contrast, with EMCRS patients, the expression of LL-37 peptide in nasal tissue is increased with Aspergillus (p < 0.001) but is reduced with Alternaria. We also observed a trend where levels of secreted LL-37 were decreased with higher doses of Alternaria and Aspergillus extracts. LL-37 is significantly up-regulated at the mRNA and protein level in CRS patients in response to fungal allergens. However, EMCRS patients do not show increased LL-37 at either the mRNA or the protein level in response to Alternaria.
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-05-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.2500/ajr.2007.21.3025
48
23