Generation of multiple stable dermcidin-derived antimicrobial peptides in sweat of different body sites.
Rieg. Siegbert S; Seeber. Silke S; Steffen. Heiko H; Humeny. Andreas A; Kalbacher. Hubert H; Stevanovic. Stefan S; Kimura. Akihiko A; Garbe. Claus C; Schittek. Birgit B
Key Findings
- Fourteen different dermcidin‑derived peptides are produced in human sweat and remain stable for several hours.
- Sweat from body sites that often contact microbes (e.g., hands, feet) has higher levels of these active dermcidin fragments.
- LL‑37 and alpha/beta‑defensins were not detected in significant quantities in eccrine sweat.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, this means sweat isn’t a viable source of LL‑37 for supplementation or topical use. The findings reinforce the natural protective role of dermcidin peptides in skin immunity, but they don’t suggest new protocols for boosting LL‑37 or other peptides via sweating.
Summary
The study shows that sweat contains many stable antimicrobial fragments of the protein dermcidin, especially in areas prone to infection, but it does NOT contain meaningful amounts of the well‑known peptide LL‑37 or other common antimicrobial peptides.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are effector molecules of innate immunity. Dermcidin (DCD), a recently discovered AMP with broad-spectrum activity, is produced constitutively by the eccrine sweat glands and secreted into sweat. In this study, we investigated the proteolytic processing, site-specific expression, and stability of DCD peptides in eccrine sweat. Using surface-enhanced laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SELDI-TOF-MS) and reversed-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography analysis, we identified in eccrine sweat 14 proteolytically processed DCD peptides. Semiquantitative SELDI-TOF-MS analysis indicated that processing of DCD-1L is individually different, but generates a few dominant peptides. At body sites with a high probability for contact with pathogenic microorganisms, a high amount of antimicrobial active DCD peptides was detected in sweat. Furthermore, we show that the secretion rate of DCD is constant during a period of prolonged sweating and that DCD peptides are stable in sweat over several hours. Other known AMPs like the human cathelicidin LL-37 and alpha- or beta-defensins were not detected in significant quantity in eccrine sweat. Owing to the durable and abundant presence, DCD-derived peptides contribute to the first line of defense by building a constant barrier that overlies the epithelial skin.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
10.1038/sj.jid.5700041