Wound healing and expression of antimicrobial peptides/polypeptides in human keratinocytes, a consequence of common growth factors.
Sørensen. Ole E OE; Cowland. Jack B JB; Theilgaard-Mönch. Kim K; Liu. Lide L; Ganz. Tomas T; Borregaard. Niels N
Key Findings
- IGF‑1 and TGF‑α increase production of LL‑37, β‑defensin‑3, NGAL, and SLPI in human keratinocytes
- Both growth factors work alone and together, showing a synergistic boost in antimicrobial peptide expression
- The findings explain why these peptides are high in psoriasis lesions and during wound healing
Practical Outcomes
- Boosting IGF‑1 (through nutrition, exercise, or safe supplementation) may enhance skin’s antimicrobial defenses and speed wound repair. Topical or localized use of growth‑factor‑rich formulations could be explored for faster healing, but dosing and safety need careful consideration.
Summary
The study shows that two growth factors, IGF‑1 and TGF‑α, trigger skin cells to make more of the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and other defense proteins, helping wounds heal and strengthening the skin’s barrier. This links growth‑factor activity directly to the body’s natural antibiotic defenses.
Abstract
In addition to acting as a physical barrier against microorganisms, the skin produces antimicrobial peptides and proteins. After wounding, growth factors are produced to stimulate the regeneration of tissue. The growth factor response ceases after regeneration of the tissue, when the physical barrier protecting against microbial infections is re-established. We found that the growth factors important in wound healing, insulin-like growth factor I and TGF-alpha, induce the expression of the antimicrobial peptides/polypeptides human cationic antimicrobial protein hCAP-18/LL-37, human beta-defensin 3, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, and secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor in human keratinocytes. Both an individual and a synergistic effect of these growth factors were observed. These findings offer an explanation for the expression of these peptides/polypeptides in the skin disease psoriasis and in wound healing and define a host defense role for growth factors in wound healing.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
2003-06-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.4049/jimmunol.170.11.5583
327
47