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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2007 pubmed 70 citations

Staphylococcus aureus lipoproteins trigger human corneal epithelial innate response through toll-like receptor-2.

Li. Qiong Q; Kumar. Ashok A; Gui. Jian-Fang JF; Yu. Fu-Shin X FS

Key Findings

  • Staphylococcus aureus lipoproteins activate TLR2 in human corneal epithelial cells
  • TLR2 activation triggers NF‑κB, JNK, and p38 pathways and increases production of LL‑37, other antimicrobial peptides, and inflammatory cytokines
  • Blocking TLR2 with an antibody stops the rise in IL‑6, IL‑8, and LL‑37

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings suggest that stimulating TLR2 could boost the body’s own LL‑37 production, which might be useful for enhancing innate immunity. However, because the experiments were limited to eye cells in vitro, there’s no ready‑to‑use protocol for people yet, and more research is needed before applying this to systemic health or longevity strategies.

Summary

The study shows that proteins from Staph bacteria can activate a receptor (TLR2) on eye cells, leading those cells to produce more of the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 along with other immune signals. This tells us that the body’s own LL‑37 can be turned on by certain bacterial components, but the work was done in lab-grown corneal cells, not in whole people.

Abstract

Bacterial lipoproteins (LP) are a family of cell wall components found in a wide variety of bacteria. In this study, we characterized the response of HUCL, a telomerase-immortalized human corneal epithelial cell (HCEC) line, to LP isolated from Staphylococcus (S) aureus. S. aureus LP (saLP) prepared by Triton X-114 extraction stimulated the activation of NF-kappaB, JNK, and P38 signaling pathways in HUCL cells. The extracts failed to stimulate NF-kappaB activation in HUCL cells after lipoprotein lipase treatment and in cell lines expressing TLR4 or TLR9, but not TLR2, indicating lipoprotein nature of the extracts. saLP induced the up-regulation of a variety of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines (IL-6, IL-8, ICAM-1), antimicrobial molecules (hBD-2, LL-37, and iNOS), and homeostasis genes (Mn-SOD) at both the mRNA level and protein level. Similar inflammatory response to saLP was also observed in primarily cultured HCECs using the production of IL-6 as readout. Moreover, TLR2 neutralizing antibody blocked the saLP-induced secretion of IL-6, IL-8 and hBD2 in HUCL cells. Our findings suggest that saLP activates TLR2 and triggers innate immune response in the cornea to S. aureus infection via production of proinflammatory cytokines and defense molecules.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007

Date

2007-11-28T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.micpath.2007.11.006

Citations

70

References

42