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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2003 pubmed 434 citations

The antimicrobial peptide LL-37 activates innate immunity at the airway epithelial surface by transactivation of the epidermal growth factor receptor.

Tjabringa. G Sandra GS; Aarbiou. Jamil J; Ninaber. Dennis K DK; Drijfhout. Jan Wouter JW; Sørensen. Ole E OE; Borregaard. Niels N; Rabe. Klaus F KF; Hiemstra. Pieter S PS

Key Findings

  • LL-37 activates the MAPK/ERK pathway in airway epithelial cells
  • Activation requires EGFR transactivation through metalloproteinase‑mediated shedding of EGFR ligands
  • Blocking EGFR, MEK, or metalloproteinases stops the LL‑37‑induced response

Practical Outcomes

  • The finding shows LL‑37 can modulate lung immune signaling, but the study provides no dosage, safety, or protocol guidance. Biohackers should view this as mechanistic insight rather than a ready‑to‑use supplement strategy, and await further research before considering LL‑37 for lung health interventions.

Summary

LL-37, a natural peptide released by immune cells, not only kills microbes but also activates lung‑lining cells by turning on the EGFR‑driven signaling pathway, which leads to inflammation‑related signals like IL‑8.

Abstract

Antimicrobial peptides produced by epithelial cells and neutrophils represent essential elements of innate immunity, and include the defensin and cathelicidin family of antimicrobial polypeptides. The human cathelicidin cationic antimicrobial protein-18 is an antimicrobial peptide precursor predominantly expressed in neutrophils, and its active peptide LL-37 is released from the precursor through the action of neutrophil serine proteinases. LL-37 has been shown to display antimicrobial activity against a broad spectrum of microorganisms, to neutralize LPS bioactivity, and to chemoattract neutrophils, monocytes, mast cells, and T cells. In this study we show that LL-37 activates airway epithelial cells as demonstrated by activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and increased release of IL-8. Epithelial cell activation was inhibited by the MAPK/ERK kinase (MEK) inhibitors PD98059 and U0126, by the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor AG1478, by blocking anti-EGFR and anti-EGFR-ligand Abs, and by the metalloproteinase inhibitor GM6001. These data suggest that LL-37 transactivates the EGFR via metalloproteinase-mediated cleavage of membrane-anchored EGFR-ligands. LL-37 may thus constitute one of the mediators by which neutrophils regulate epithelial cell activity in the lung.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2003

Date

2003-12-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.4049/jimmunol.171.12.6690

Citations

434

References

48