Cathepsin D is present in human eccrine sweat and involved in the postsecretory processing of the antimicrobial peptide DCD-1L.
Baechle. Daniel D; Flad. Thomas T; Cansier. Alexander A; Steffen. Heiko H; Schittek. Birgit B; Tolson. Jonathan J; Herrmann. Timo T; Dihazi. Hassan H; Beck. Alexander A; Mueller. Gerhard A GA; Mueller. Margret M; Stevanovic. Stefan S; Garbe. Claus C; Mueller. Claudia A CA; Kalbacher. Hubert H
Key Findings
- Cathepsin D is present and enzymatically active in human eccrine sweat
- Cathepsin D selectively cleaves the antimicrobial peptide DCD‑1L but not LL‑37
- One CatD‑generated DCD‑1L fragment has stronger antibacterial activity against E. coli than the original peptide
Practical Outcomes
- For most self‑experimenters this study is mainly of scientific interest; it doesn’t provide a new supplement, dosage, or protocol. It does highlight that skin enzymes can modify antimicrobial peptides, which might be relevant for future topical formulations or skin‑health strategies, but no immediate actionable steps are recommended.
Summary
Researchers found that the enzyme cathepsin D is naturally present and active in human sweat, where it chops up the antimicrobial peptide DCD‑1L into several smaller pieces. One of these new fragments is even better at killing E. coli, while another common sweat peptide, LL‑37, isn’t affected. The work shows how our skin’s own enzymes can fine‑tune its natural defenses, but it doesn’t suggest any new supplement or routine for most biohackers.
Abstract
The protein pattern of healthy human eccrine sweat was investigated and 10 major proteins were detected from which apolipoprotein D, lipophilin B, and cathepsin D (CatD) were identified for the first time in human eccrine sweat. We focused our studies on the function of the aspartate protease CatD in sweat. In vitro digestion experiments using a specific fluorescent CatD substrate showed that CatD is enzymatically active in human sweat. To identify potential substrates of CatD in human eccrine sweat LL-37 and DCD-1L, two antimicrobial peptides present in sweat, were digested in vitro with purified CatD. LL-37 was not significantly digested by CatD, whereas DCD-1L was cleaved between Leu(44) and Asp(45) and between Leu(29) and Glu(30) almost completely. The DCD-1L-derived peptides generated in vitro by CatD were also found in vivo in human sweat as determined by surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization (SELDI) mass spectrometry. Furthermore, besides the CatD-processed peptides we identified additionally DCD-1L-derived peptides that are generated upon cleavage with a 1,10-phenanthroline-sensitive carboxypeptidase and an endoprotease. Taken together, proteolytic processing generates 12 DCD-1L-derived peptides. To elucidate the functional significance of postsecretory processing the antimicrobial activity of three CatD-processed DCD-1L peptides was tested. Whereas two of these peptides showed no activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, one DCD-1L-derived peptide showed an even higher activity against Escherichia coli than DCD-1L. Functional analysis indicated that proteolytic processing of DCD-1L by CatD in human sweat modulates the innate immune defense of human skin.
Study Information
pubmed
2005
2005-12-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1074/jbc.m504670200