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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2005 pubmed

Endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide) neutralization by innate immunity host-defense peptides. Peptide properties and plausible modes of action.

Rosenfeld. Yosef Y; Papo. Niv N; Shai. Yechiel Y

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 and other short antimicrobial peptides strongly bind to LPS aggregates and cause them to dissociate.
  • This binding prevents LPS from interacting with the CD14 receptor and lipopolysaccharide‑binding protein, blocking downstream cytokine release.
  • Both in cell‑free solutions and on macrophage surfaces, the peptides reduced LPS‑induced inflammation in mouse RAW264.7 and primary bone‑marrow macrophages.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers interested in controlling inflammation, the data suggest that boosting LL‑37 activity (e.g., via vitamin D, which up‑regulates its expression) could help mitigate endotoxin‑driven immune activation. Direct supplementation with synthetic LL‑37 is not yet a mainstream, safe option, but strategies that naturally raise its levels may be worth exploring for gut‑derived LPS exposure or occasional endotoxin challenges.

Summary

The study shows that the natural human peptide LL‑37 (and similar short antimicrobial peptides) can bind to bacterial endotoxin (LPS) and stop it from triggering inflammatory signals in immune cells. By breaking up LPS clumps, these peptides keep the toxin from attaching to its usual receptors, which reduces the release of harmful cytokines.

Abstract

Binding of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to macrophages results in proinflammatory cytokine secretion. In extreme cases it leads to endotoxic shock. A few innate immunity antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) neutralize LPS activity. However, the underlying mechanism and properties of the peptides are not yet clear. Toward meeting this goal we investigated four AMPs and their fluorescently labeled analogs. These AMPs varied in composition, length, structure, and selectivity toward cells. The list included human LL-37 (37-mer), magainin (24-mer), a 15-mer amphipathic alpha-helix, and its D,L-amino acid structurally altered analog. The peptides were investigated for their ability to inhibit LPS-mediated cytokine release from RAW264.7 and bone marrow-derived primary macrophages, to bind LPS in solution, and when LPS is already bound to macrophages (fluorescence spectroscopy and confocal microscopy), to compete with LPS for its binding site on the CD14 receptor (flow cytometry) and affect LPS oligomerization. We conclude that a strong binding of a peptide to LPS aggregates accompanied by aggregate dissociation prevents LPS from binding to the carrier protein lipopolysaccharide-binding protein, or alternatively to its receptor, and hence inhibits cytokine secretion.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

Date

2005-11-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1074/jbc.m504327200