The human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 is a multifunctional modulator of innate immune responses.
Scott. Monisha G MG; Davidson. Donald J DJ; Gold. Michael R MR; Bowdish. Dawn D; Hancock. Robert E W RE
Key Findings
- LL-37 blocks macrophage activation by bacterial components such as LPS, lipoteichoic acid, and lipoarabinomannan
- LL-37 protects mice from lethal endotoxemia
- LL-37 up‑regulates chemokines (MCP‑1, IL‑8) and chemokine receptors (CXCR‑4, CCR2, IL‑8RB) without increasing pro‑inflammatory TNF‑alpha
Practical Outcomes
- The peptide could become a template for new anti‑sepsis or immune‑modulating supplements, but there’s no human dosage or safety data yet. Biohackers should view LL-37 as a promising research target rather than a ready‑to‑use product, and focus on emerging analogs or topical formulations that might harness its benefits safely.
Summary
LL-37 is a natural human peptide that can calm down harmful inflammation caused by bacterial toxins while still calling immune cells to the infection site. In mice it stopped deadly shock from endotoxins and boosted helpful signaling molecules without raising classic inflammatory cytokines like TNF‑alpha. The work shows LL-37’s dual role as an anti‑sepsis agent and immune recruiter, but it’s still early‑stage and only tested in animals.
Abstract
The role of LL-37, a human cationic antimicrobial peptide, in the immune system is not yet clearly understood. It is a widely expressed peptide that can be up-regulated during an immune response. In this report, we demonstrate that LL-37 is a potent antisepsis agent with the ability to inhibit macrophage stimulation by bacterial components such as LPS, lipoteichoic acid, and noncapped lipoarabinomannan. We also demonstrate that LL-37 protects mice against lethal endotoxemia. In addition to preventing macrophage activation by bacterial components, we hypothesized the LL-37 may also have direct effects on macrophage function. We therefore used gene expression profiling to identify macrophage functions that might be modulated by LL-37. These studies revealed that LL-37 directly up-regulates 29 genes and down-regulated another 20 genes. Among the genes predicted to be up-regulated by LL-37 were those encoding chemokines and chemokine receptors. Consistent with this, LL-37 up-regulated the expression of chemokines in macrophages and the mouse lung (monocyte chemoattractant protein 1), human A549 epithelial cells (IL-8), and whole human blood (monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 and IL-8), without stimulating the proinflammatory cytokine, TNFalpha. LL-37 also up-regulated the chemokine receptors CXCR-4, CCR2, and IL-8RB. These findings indicate that LL-37 may contribute to the immune response by limiting the damage caused by bacterial products and by recruiting immune cells to the site of infection so that they can clear the infection.
Study Information
pubmed
2002
2002-10-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.4049/jimmunol.169.7.3883
743
43