Antibacterial peptides: basic facts and emerging concepts.
Boman. H G HG
Key Findings
- LL-37 is a positively charged, 37‑amino‑acid peptide that targets bacterial membranes and acts faster than bacteria can grow.
- Deficiencies in LL-37 (and other antimicrobial peptides) are linked to severe conditions such as Kostmann disease and atopic allergy.
- Several antibacterial peptides, including LL-37, are being investigated for therapeutic use as new antibiotics.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that boosting or supplementing LL-37 could theoretically improve innate immunity, but no safe dosage or delivery method is established yet. Keep an eye on emerging clinical trials, as future products may become available for self‑experimentation once safety and efficacy are proven.
Summary
LL-37 is a naturally occurring antimicrobial peptide that helps our immune system kill bacteria quickly. It is one of the few cathelicidin peptides humans make, and lacking it can cause serious health problems like certain immune disorders and allergies. Researchers are looking at LL-37 and similar peptides as possible new drugs.
Abstract
Antibacterial peptides are the effector molecules of innate immunity. Generally they contain 15-45 amino acid residues and the net charge is positive. The cecropin type of linear peptides without cysteine were found first in insects, whilst the defensin type with three disulphide bridges were found in rabbit granulocytes. Now a database stores more than 800 sequences of antibacterial peptides and proteins from the animal and plant kingdoms. Generally, each species has 15-40 peptides made from genes, which code for only one precursor. The dominating targets are bacterial membranes and the killing reaction must be faster than the growth rate of the bacteria. Some antibacterial peptides are clearly multifunctional and an attempt to predict this property from the hydrophobicity of all amino acid side chains are given. Gene structures and biosynthesis are known both in the fruit fly Drosophila and several mammals. Humans need two classes of defensins and the cathelicidin-derived linear peptide LL-37. Clinical cases show that deficiencies in these peptides give severe symptoms. Examples given are morbus Kostmann and atopic allergy. Several antibacterial peptides are being developed as drugs.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
2003-09-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1046/j.1365-2796.2003.01228.x
1136
121