Expression of bioactive recombinant GSLL-39, a variant of human antimicrobial peptide LL-37, in Escherichia coli.
Yang. Ying-Hua YH; Zheng. Guo-Guang GG; Li. Ge G; Zhang. Xiu-Jun XJ; Cao. Zhen-Yu ZY; Rao. Qing Q; Wu. Ke-Fu KF
Key Findings
- A modified precursor (mhCAP‑18) with a thrombin site was successfully expressed in E. coli as a soluble thioredoxin fusion.
- Thrombin digestion released recombinant GSLL‑39, which was purified and shown to retain antimicrobial activity against Gram‑negative and Gram‑positive bacteria.
- The recombinant peptide has two extra N‑terminal residues but still matches the native peptide’s antibacterial effectiveness.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY biohackers, this shows that LL‑37 can be produced in a lab using standard bacterial expression systems, opening the door to small‑scale synthesis. However, the study does not address dosing, safety in humans, or formulation, so further work is needed before practical supplementation or therapeutic use.
Summary
Scientists figured out a way to make a version of the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 in bacteria, then cut it out to get a usable peptide that works just like the natural one against bacteria.
Abstract
The human cationic antimicrobial peptide hCAP-18/LL-37 is the unique cathelicidin identified in human to date. It has broad spectrum of antimicrobial activities and LPS-neutralizing activity and is involved in angiogenesis. Both purified and synthetic LL-37 or its derivatives were used in the study on LL-37. However, production of LL-37 in Escherichia coli has not been established. In this study, its precursor instead of the mature peptide was adopted for expression to avoid the lethal effect of recombinant LL-37 on host cells. A thrombin recognition site was introduced between the cathelin-like domain and LL-37 domain by overlap PCR to construct fragment encoding modified precursor (mhCAP-18) to facilitate the final release of the recombinant peptide. Then mhCAP-18 was fused in-frame to thioredoxin gene under the control of inducible T7 promoter to construct expression vector pET-mhCAP-18. The soluble form fusion protein was expressed in E. coli and purified by Chelating Sepharose column chromatography. Thrombin digestion of the fusion protein yielded recombinant GSLL-39, which was then purified by cation-exchange chromatography. Recombinant GSLL-39, which has two extra residues on its N-terminus when compared with its native counterpart, showed similar antimicrobial activities against both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
10.1016/j.pep.2004.06.007