Cathelicidins, multifunctional peptides of the innate immunity.
Zanetti. Margherita M
Key Findings
- LL-37 has broad antimicrobial activity and attracts neutrophils, monocytes, mast cells, and T‑cells
- It promotes wound vascularization, re‑epithelialization, and alters macrophage gene expression
- Related cathelicidins in other species (PR‑39, BMAP‑28) show wound‑repair, angiogenesis, and cell‑killing effects
Practical Outcomes
- The findings suggest LL‑37 could be explored for immune‑boosting or wound‑healing applications, but the abstract provides no dosage, safety, or delivery guidance. Biohackers should treat this as basic science insight and await clinical studies before trying any LL‑37‑based interventions.
Summary
LL-37 is a natural protein fragment that kills microbes and also calls immune cells to sites of infection, helps skin wounds heal faster, and changes how some immune cells behave. Similar peptides in pigs and cows do related things like promoting blood vessel growth or killing abnormal cells. The study mainly describes what these peptides do in the body, not how to use them safely as a supplement or therapy.
Abstract
Cathelicidins comprise a family of mammalian proteins containing a C-terminal cationic antimicrobial domain that becomes active after being freed from the N-terminal cathelin portion of the holoprotein. Many other members of this family have been identified since the first cathelicidin sequences were reported 10 years ago. The mature peptides generally show a wide spectrum of antimicrobial activity and, more recently, some of them have also been found to exert other biological activities. The human cathelicidin peptide LL-37 is chemotactic for neutrophils, monocytes, mast cells, and T cells; induces degranulation of mast cells; alters transcriptional responses in macrophages; stimulates wound vascularization and re-epithelialization of healing skin. The porcine PR-39 has also been involved in a variety of processes, including promotion of wound repair, induction of angiogenesis, neutrophils chemotaxis, and inhibition of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase activity, whereas the bovine BMAP-28 induces apoptosis in transformed cell lines and activated lymphocytes and may thus help with clearance of unwanted cells at inflammation sites. These multiple actions provide evidence for active participation of cathelicidin peptides in the regulation of the antimicrobial host defenses.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
2003-07-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1189/jlb.0403147
1046
131