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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2006 pubmed 36 citations

Recombinant expression of human cathelicidin (hCAP18/LL-37) in Pichia pastoris.

Hong. In-Pyo IP; Lee. Sung-Jae SJ; Kim. Yong-Seok YS; Choi. Shin-Geon SG

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 gene was successfully expressed in Pichia pastoris using a GAP promoter vector
  • The produced peptide is about 5 kDa and retains an N‑terminal methionine
  • Crude yeast extract containing LL‑37 inhibited growth of Micrococcus luteus

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY biohackers, this demonstrates a feasible way to generate LL‑37 using yeast fermentation, though it still needs lab equipment for cloning, fermentation, and purification. It suggests that other human defensins could be made similarly, offering a potential source of antimicrobial peptides for personal experiments.

Summary

Scientists showed they can make the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 inside a common yeast (Pichia pastoris) and pull it out with activity against bacteria. The peptide comes out a bit larger because it still has an extra methionine at the start. This proves the yeast system can be used to produce LL‑37 without fancy fusion tricks.

Abstract

The constitutive expression of human cathelicidin LL-37 antimicrobial peptide was achieved using the methylotrophic yeast, Pichia pastoris. An LL-37 cDNA clone was amplified by PCR using human fetal cDNA library as template. The 111 bp fragment encoding mature LL-37 gene was subcloned into pGAPZ-E, an episomal form of the pGAPZB vector incorporating PARS1. It was then transformed into the P. pastoris X-33 strain for intracellular expression. A small peptide with a molecular mass of about 5 kDa was detected by 17% peptide-PAGE analysis. The recombinant LL-37 peptide was purified from the gel and its amino acid sequence was determined by LC-ESI-MS/MS analysis. The initiating amino acid, methionine, was still attached to the N-terminal region of recombinant LL-37. LL-37 crude extract from P. pastoris showed an antimicrobial activity against Micrococcus luteus as the test strain. The successful expression of human LL-37 indicates that the system may be applicable to the expression of other human defensins without resorting to fusion protein constructions.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-10-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s10529-006-9202-8

Citations

36

References

23