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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2005 pubmed 570 citations

Human antimicrobial peptides: defensins, cathelicidins and histatins.

De Smet. Kris K; Contreras. Roland R

Key Findings

  • Human antimicrobial peptides are small, positively charged, and can kill bacteria, fungi, and some viruses.
  • Defensins have a stable beta‑sheet structure held together by disulfide bonds; histatins are flexible and become helical in non‑water environments.
  • LL-37 is derived from the CAP18 protein and shifts from a random coil in water to an alpha‑helix in hydrophobic settings.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the review mainly provides background knowledge about LL-37’s structure and antimicrobial potential, but it does not offer dosing guidelines, safety data, or specific protocols. It suggests that LL-37 could be explored for its antimicrobial effects, yet further research is needed before practical applications.

Summary

The article reviews three groups of human antimicrobial peptides—defensins, histatins, and the cathelicidin LL-37—explaining their basic structures and how they act against microbes. LL-37 is a small protein fragment that changes shape depending on its environment, becoming an alpha‑helix in oily conditions.

Abstract

Antimicrobial peptides, which have been isolated from many bacteria, fungi, plants, invertebrates and vertebrates, are an important component of the natural defenses of most living organisms. The isolated peptides are very heterogeneous in length, sequence and structure, but most of them are small, cationic and amphipathic. These peptides exhibit broad-spectrum activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, yeasts, fungi and enveloped viruses. A wide variety of human proteins and peptides also have antimicrobial activity and play important roles in innate immunity. In this review we discuss three important groups of human antimicrobial peptides. The defensins are cationic non-glycosylated peptides containing six cysteine residues that form three intramolecular disulfide bridges, resulting in a triple-stranded beta-sheet structure. In humans, two classes of defensins can be found: alpha-defensins and beta-defensins. The defensin-related HE2 isoforms will also be discussed. The second group is the family of histatins, which are small, cationic, histidine-rich peptides present in human saliva. Histatins adopt a random coil conformation in aqueous solvents and form alpha-helices in non-aqueous solvents. The third group comprises only one antimicrobial peptide, the cathelicidin LL-37. This peptide is derived proteolytically from the C-terminal end of the human CAP18 protein. Just like the histatins, it adopts a largely random coil conformation in a hydrophilic environment, and forms an alpha-helical structure in a hydrophobic environment.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

Date

2005-09-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s10529-005-0936-5

Citations

570

References

92