Expression of an additional cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide protects against bacterial skin infection.
Lee. Phillip H A PH; Ohtake. Takaaki T; Zaiou. Mohamed M; Murakami. Masamoto M; Rudisill. Jennifer A JA; Lin. Kenneth H KH; Gallo. Richard L RL
Key Findings
- PR‑39 works additively with LL‑37 to kill group A Streptococcus in vitro
- Lentiviral delivery of PR‑39 to human keratinocytes boosts bacterial killing
- Transgenic mice expressing PR‑39 have 50% smaller ulcers and 60% fewer bacteria after skin infection, while extra human cathelicidin gives no benefit
Practical Outcomes
- The main takeaway is that combining different cathelicidin peptides could theoretically strengthen skin’s antimicrobial defense. However, the work is limited to cell cultures and genetically modified mice, so there’s no proven, safe way to apply PR‑39 in humans yet. Biohackers might explore topical peptide blends, but must treat this as experimental and await human safety studies.
Summary
Adding a second cathelicidin peptide (PR‑39) to the human peptide LL‑37 makes skin cells better at killing group A strep in lab tests, and mice engineered to constantly produce PR‑39 get smaller infections. The study shows the concept works in animals, but it doesn’t give a human‑ready recipe or safety data.
Abstract
Cathelicidin antimicrobial peptides are effectors of innate immune defense in mammals. Humans and mice have only one cathelicidin gene, whereas domesticated mammals such as the pig, cow, and horse have multiple cathelicidin genes. We hypothesized that the evolution of multiple cathelicidin genes provides these animals with enhanced resistance to infection. To test this, we investigated the effects of the addition of cathelicidins by combining synthetic cathelicidin peptides in vitro, by producing human keratinocytes that overexpress cathelicidins in culture, or by producing transgenic mice that constitutively overexpress cathelicidins in vivo. The porcine cathelicidin peptide PR-39 acted additively with human cathelicidin LL-37 to kill group A Streptococcus (GAS). Lentiviral delivery of PR-39 enhanced killing of GAS by human keratinocytes. Finally, transgenic mice expressing PR-39 under the influence of a K14 promoter showed increased resistance to GAS skin infection (50% smaller necrotic ulcers and 60% fewer surviving bacteria). Similarly constructed transgenic mice designed to overexpress their native cathelicidin did not show increased resistance. These findings demonstrate that targeted gene transfer of a xenobiotic cathelicidin confers resistance against infection and suggests the benefit of duplication and divergence in the evolution of antimicrobial peptides.
Study Information
pubmed
2005
2005-02-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1073/pnas.0500268102