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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2006 pubmed

Improved outcome in shigellosis associated with butyrate induction of an endogenous peptide antibiotic.

Raqib. Rubhana R; Sarker. Protim P; Bergman. Peter P; Ara. Gul G; Lindh. Monica M; Sack. David A DA; Nasirul Islam. K M KM; Gudmundsson. Gudmundur H GH; Andersson. Jan J; Agerberth. Birgitta B

Key Findings

  • Butyrate treatment (0.14 mmol/kg twice daily) significantly increased CAP‑18 expression in colonic surface cells.
  • Rabbits receiving butyrate showed reduced clinical symptoms, less colon inflammation, and lower stool bacterial counts.
  • The combination of CAP‑18 and butyrate killed Shigella more effectively in vitro than CAP‑18 alone.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this points to oral butyrate as a potential way to boost the body's own antimicrobial defenses during gut infections like shigellosis. While the data are from rabbits and human dosing isn’t established, a short course of high‑dose butyrate (similar to the study’s regimen) could be explored as an adjunct to standard care, keeping in mind safety and the need for clinical validation.

Summary

In a rabbit model of shigellosis, giving oral butyrate twice daily for three days boosted the gut's own antimicrobial peptide (the rabbit version of LL‑37 called CAP‑18). This led to less illness, lower inflammation, and fewer bacteria in the stool. The study suggests that butyrate can turn on a natural antibiotic in the colon and help clear Shigella infections.

Abstract

Shigella is a major cause of morbidity, mortality, and growth retardation for children in developing countries. Emergence of antibiotic resistance among Shigellae demands the development of effective medicines. Previous studies found that the endogenous antimicrobial peptide LL-37 is down-regulated in the rectal epithelium of patients during shigellosis and that butyrate up-regulates the expression of LL-37 in colonic epithelial cells in vitro and decreases severity of inflammation in experimental shigellosis. In this study, Shigella-infected dysenteric rabbits were treated with butyrate (0.14 mmol/kg of body weight) twice daily for 3 days, and the expression levels of the rabbit homologue to LL-37, CAP-18, were monitored in the colon. Butyrate treatment resulted in (i) reduced clinical illness, severity of inflammation in the colon, and bacterial load in the stool, (ii) significant up-regulation of CAP-18 in the surface epithelium, and (iii) disappearance of CAP-18-positive cells in lamina propria. The active CAP-18 peptide was released in stool from its proform by butyrate treatment. In healthy controls, CAP-18 expression was localized predominantly to the epithelial surface of the colon. In infected rabbits, CAP-18 expression was localized to immune and inflammatory cells in the colon, whereas the ulcerated epithelium was devoid of CAP-18 expression. The combination of CAP-18 and butyrate was more efficient in killing Shigella in vitro than CAP-18 alone. Our findings indicate that oral butyrate treatment in shigellosis may be of clinical value because of induction of the endogenous cathelicidin CAP-18 in the colonic epithelium, stimulation of the release of the active peptide CAP-18, and promoting elimination of Shigella.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-06-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1073/pnas.0602888103