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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2001 pubmed 1265 citations

Innate antimicrobial peptide protects the skin from invasive bacterial infection.

Nizet. V V; Ohtake. T T; Lauth. X X; Trowbridge. J J; Rudisill. J J; Dorschner. R A RA; Pestonjamasp. V V; Piraino. J J; Huttner. K K; Gallo. R L RL

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 is a naturally occurring peptide that kills bacteria on skin surfaces
  • Mice lacking cathelicidin peptides are more vulnerable to Group A Streptococcus skin infection
  • The peptide’s protective role was demonstrated using a combined mouse and bacterial genetic approach

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings confirm LL‑37’s role in skin immunity, suggesting that strategies to boost its levels (e.g., vitamin D supplementation or topical agents that induce cathelicidin expression) might enhance skin protection, but the study does not provide specific dosing or application protocols for humans.

Summary

This study shows that the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 (and its mouse version CRAMP) helps protect skin from serious bacterial infections in mice, proving it’s an important part of the body’s first‑line defense.

Abstract

In mammals, several gene families encode peptides with antibacterial activity, such as the beta-defensins and cathelicidins. These peptides are expressed on epithelial surfaces and in neutrophils, and have been proposed to provide a first line of defence against infection by acting as 'natural antibiotics'. The protective effect of antimicrobial peptides is brought into question by observations that several of these peptides are easily inactivated and have diverse cellular effects that are distinct from antimicrobial activity demonstrated in vitro. To investigate the function of a specific antimicrobial peptide in a mouse model of cutaneous infection, we applied a combined mammalian and bacterial genetic approach to the cathelicidin antimicrobial gene family. The mature human (LL-37) and mouse (CRAMP) peptides are encoded by similar genes (CAMP and Cnlp, respectively), and have similar alpha-helical structures, spectra of antimicrobial activity and tissue distribution. Here we show that cathelicidins are an important native component of innate host defence in mice and provide protection against necrotic skin infection caused by Group A Streptococcus (GAS).

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2001

Date

2001-11-22T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/35106587

Citations

1265

References

33