The human gene FALL39 and processing of the cathelin precursor to the antibacterial peptide LL-37 in granulocytes.
Gudmundsson. G H GH; Agerberth. B B; Odeberg. J J; Bergman. T T; Olsson. B B; Salcedo. R R
Key Findings
- The FALL39 gene is a single cathelicidin gene with four exons encoding a signal sequence, cathelin region, and the LL‑37 peptide.
- LL‑37 is the mature, potent antibacterial fragment released from granulocytes after degranulation.
- Potential regulatory sites for acute‑phase response factors, especially IL‑6, were found in the gene’s promoter and intron.
Practical Outcomes
- Knowing LL‑37’s genetic source and regulation suggests that strategies boosting innate immunity (e.g., controlled inflammation or IL‑6 pathways) might raise its levels, but the study doesn’t provide dosing or supplement guidelines. For biohackers, the main actionable insight is that synthetic or topical LL‑37 could be explored for antimicrobial purposes, pending safety and formulation work.
Summary
Scientists mapped the human gene that makes the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, showing it’s the only cathelicidin gene in our DNA and that it’s produced in white‑blood cells, likely controlled by inflammation signals like interleukin‑6.
Abstract
The peptide FA-LL-37, previously termed FALL-39, was originally predicted from on ORF of a cDNA clone isolated from a human bone marrow library. This peptide was synthesized and found to have antibacterial activity. We have now characterized and sequenced the complete gene for FA-LL-37, termed FALL39. It is a compact gene of 1963 bp with four exons. Exons 1-3 code for a signal sequence and the cathelin region. Exon 4 contains the information for the mature antibacterial peptide. Our results indicate that FALL39 is the only member of the cathelin gene family present in the human genome. Potential binding sites for acute-phase-response factors are identified in the promoter and in intron 2. A possible role for the cytokine interleukin-6 in the regulation of FALL 39 is discussed. Anti-(FA-LL-37) IgG located the peptide in granulocytes and we isolated the mature peptide from these cells after degranulation. Structural analysis determined the mature peptide to be LL-37. To obtain LL-37 for antibacterial assays, synthetic FA-LL-37 was degraded with dipeptidyl-peptidase I. This analysis showed that mature LL-37 is a potent antibacterial peptide.
Study Information
pubmed
1996
1996-06-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1432-1033.1996.0325z.x