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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2010 pubmed 891 citations

The Alzheimer's disease-associated amyloid beta-protein is an antimicrobial peptide.

Soscia. Stephanie J SJ; Kirby. James E JE; Washicosky. Kevin J KJ; Tucker. Stephanie M SM; Ingelsson. Martin M; Hyman. Bradley B; Burton. Mark A MA; Goldstein. Lee E LE; Duong. Scott S; Tanzi. Rudolph E RE; Moir. Robert D RD

Key Findings

  • Amyloid‑beta (Aβ) displays antimicrobial activity against eight clinically relevant microorganisms, comparable to the human AMP LL‑37.
  • Whole‑brain homogenates from Alzheimer’s patients show greater antimicrobial activity than non‑AD brains, correlating with Aβ levels.
  • Removing Aβ with specific antibodies eliminates the antimicrobial effect, confirming Aβ as the active agent.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research suggests that targeting amyloid‑beta with drugs might unintentionally weaken innate immune defenses, so caution is warranted when using anti‑Aβ therapies. It also highlights that Aβ’s role isn’t purely harmful, which could influence how future longevity or neuro‑protective strategies are designed. However, the findings don’t provide a direct protocol or dosage recommendation for personal use.

Summary

The study shows that the protein amyloid‑beta, which is usually linked to Alzheimer’s disease, also works like an antimicrobial peptide (AMP) similar to the human AMP LL‑37. In lab tests, amyloid‑beta killed a range of common microbes as well as, or better than, LL‑37, and brain tissue from Alzheimer’s patients had higher antimicrobial activity that disappeared when amyloid‑beta was removed.

Abstract

The amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) is believed to be the key mediator of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. Abeta is most often characterized as an incidental catabolic byproduct that lacks a normal physiological role. However, Abeta has been shown to be a specific ligand for a number of different receptors and other molecules, transported by complex trafficking pathways, modulated in response to a variety of environmental stressors, and able to induce pro-inflammatory activities. Here, we provide data supporting an in vivo function for Abeta as an antimicrobial peptide (AMP). Experiments used established in vitro assays to compare antimicrobial activities of Abeta and LL-37, an archetypical human AMP. Findings reveal that Abeta exerts antimicrobial activity against eight common and clinically relevant microorganisms with a potency equivalent to, and in some cases greater than, LL-37. Furthermore, we show that AD whole brain homogenates have significantly higher antimicrobial activity than aged matched non-AD samples and that AMP action correlates with tissue Abeta levels. Consistent with Abeta-mediated activity, the increased antimicrobial action was ablated by immunodepletion of AD brain homogenates with anti-Abeta antibodies. Our findings suggest Abeta is a hitherto unrecognized AMP that may normally function in the innate immune system. This finding stands in stark contrast to current models of Abeta-mediated pathology and has important implications for ongoing and future AD treatment strategies.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-03-03T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0009505

Citations

891

References

87