Postsecretory processing generates multiple cathelicidins for enhanced topical antimicrobial defense.
Murakami. Masamoto M; Lopez-Garcia. Belen B; Braff. Marissa M; Dorschner. Robert A RA; Gallo. Richard L RL
Key Findings
- CAMP (LL‑37) is enzymatically processed on the skin surface into multiple novel peptides
- The processed peptides have stronger antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus and Candida albicans
- The processed peptides lose the ability to stimulate IL‑8 release from keratinocytes, reducing inflammatory signaling
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY skin‑care or biohacking protocols, plain LL‑37 may be less optimal because it can provoke inflammation. Formulations that include protease activity or use the processed peptide fragments could offer stronger antimicrobial protection with less irritation. This insight suggests focusing on post‑secretory peptide forms rather than the full‑length LL‑37 for topical applications.
Summary
After being released onto the skin, the body’s LL‑37 protein gets cut up by enzymes into several smaller pieces. These new pieces kill skin bugs like Staph and yeast even better than the original LL‑37, but they no longer trigger the skin cells to release the inflammation signal IL‑8. So the same gene can produce a version that’s more focused on killing microbes and less on causing inflammation.
Abstract
The production of antimicrobial peptides and proteins is essential for defense against infection. Many of the known human antimicrobial peptides are multifunctional, with stimulatory activities such as chemotaxis while simultaneously acting as natural antibiotics. In humans, eccrine appendages express DCD and CAMP, genes encoding proteins processed into the antimicrobial peptides dermcidin and LL-37. In this study we show that after secretion onto the skin surface, the CAMP gene product is processed by a serine protease-dependent mechanism into multiple novel antimicrobial peptides distinct from the cathelicidin LL-37. These peptides show enhanced antimicrobial action, acquiring the ability to kill skin pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus and Candida albicans. Furthermore, although LL-37 may influence the host inflammatory response by stimulating IL-8 release from keratinocytes, this activity is lost in subsequently processed peptides. Thus, a single gene product encoding an important defense molecule alters structure and function in the topical environment to shift the balance of activity toward direct inhibition of microbial colonization.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.4049/jimmunol.172.5.3070
309
35