Co-regulation and interdependence of the mammalian epidermal permeability and antimicrobial barriers.
Aberg. Karin M KM; Man. Mao-Qiang MQ; Gallo. Richard L RL; Ganz. Tomas T; Crumrine. Debra D; Brown. Barbara E BE; Choi. Eung-Ho EH; Kim. Dong-Kun DK; Schröder. Jens M JM; Feingold. Kenneth R KR; Elias. Peter M PM
Key Findings
- LL‑37 (CRAMP) levels increase quickly after the skin’s permeability barrier is disrupted, matching lipid production needed for repair.
- Artificially restoring the barrier prevents the rise in LL‑37, indicating its production is linked to barrier needs.
- Mice lacking LL‑37 show delayed barrier recovery and abnormal skin lipid structures, showing LL‑37 is required for normal barrier function.
Practical Outcomes
- Supporting the skin’s barrier (e.g., with moisturizers or barrier‑repair creams) may naturally boost LL‑37, enhancing antimicrobial defense. Topical LL‑37 or its analogs could be explored to speed up skin healing, but more human data are needed before dosing recommendations.
Summary
The study shows that the skin’s natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 (called CRAMP in mice) rises when the skin barrier is damaged and helps the barrier heal back, while blocking barrier repair stops this peptide’s increase. Mice missing LL‑37 recover more slowly, proving the peptide is important for skin health.
Abstract
Human epidermis elaborates two small cationic, highly hydrophobic antimicrobial peptides (AMP), beta-defensin 2 (hBD2), and the carboxypeptide cleavage product of human cathelicidin (hCAP18), LL-37, which are co-packaged along with lipids within epidermal lamellar bodies (LBs) before their secretion. Because of their colocalization, we hypothesized that AMP and barrier lipid production could be coregulated by altered permeability barrier requirements. mRNA and immunostainable protein levels for mBD3 and cathelin-related antimicrobial peptide (CRAMP) (murine homologues of hBD2 and LL-37, respectively) increase 1-8 hours after acute permeability barrier disruption and normalize by 24 hours, kinetics that mirror the lipid metabolic response to permeability barrier disruption. Artificial permeability barrier restoration, which inhibits the lipid-synthetic response leading to barrier recovery, blocks the increase in AMP mRNA/protein expression, further evidence that AMP expression is linked to permeability barrier function. Conversely, LB-derived AMPs are also important for permeability barrier homeostasis. Despite an apparent increase in mBD3 protein, CRAMP-/- mice delayed permeability barrier recovery, attributable to defective LB contents and abnormalities in the structure of the lamellar membranes that regulate permeability barrier function. These studies demonstrate that (1) the permeability and antimicrobial barriers are coordinately regulated by permeability barrier requirements and (2) CRAMP is required for permeability barrier homeostasis.
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-10-18T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/sj.jid.5701099