The contact system--a novel branch of innate immunity generating antibacterial peptides.
Frick. Inga-Maria IM; Akesson. Per P; Herwald. Heiko H; Mörgelin. Matthias M; Malmsten. Martin M; Nägler. Dorit K DK; Björck. Lars L
Key Findings
- Contact system activation generates a 26‑aa fragment with strong antibacterial activity
- The fragment kills several bacterial species as effectively as LL‑37 at physiological salt levels
- Inhibiting the contact system in animal models worsens bacterial infection, showing its importance in innate immunity
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the finding suggests that boosting the contact system or using short synthetic peptides modeled on this fragment could enhance antimicrobial defenses, but the research is still early and no human dosing or safety data are provided. It reinforces the potential of LL‑37‑like peptides but isn’t yet a ready‑to‑use protocol.
Summary
The study shows that when the body’s contact system is activated, it creates a short 26‑amino‑acid piece that can kill bacteria just as well as the well‑known antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, even in normal salt conditions. Blocking this system in mice makes infections spread faster, highlighting its protective role.
Abstract
Activation of the contact system has two classical consequences: initiation of the intrinsic pathway of coagulation, and cleavage of high molecular weight kininogen (HK) leading to the release of bradykinin, a potent proinflammatory peptide. In human plasma, activation of the contact system at the surface of significant bacterial pathogens was found to result in further HK processing and bacterial killing. A fragment comprising the D3 domain of HK is generated, and within this fragment a sequence of 26 amino acids is mainly responsible for the antibacterial activity. A synthetic peptide covering this sequence kills several bacterial species, also at physiological salt concentration, as effectively as the classical human antibacterial peptide LL-37. Moreover, in an animal model of infection, inhibition of the contact system promotes bacterial dissemination and growth. These data identify a novel and important role for the contact system in the defence against invasive bacterial infection.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-11-09T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/sj.emboj.7601422
165
54