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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2004 pubmed

The human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 transfers extracellular DNA plasmid to the nuclear compartment of mammalian cells via lipid rafts and proteoglycan-dependent endocytosis.

Sandgren. Staffan S; Wittrup. Anders A; Cheng. Fang F; Jönsson. Mats M; Eklund. Erik E; Busch. Susann S; Belting. Mattias M

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 binds extracellular plasmid DNA and shields it from serum nucleases.
  • The LL‑37‑DNA complex enters cells via cholesterol‑dependent lipid rafts, not caveolae, and requires cell‑surface proteoglycans.
  • Once inside, the DNA reaches the nucleus and can be expressed, while LL‑37 shows little toxicity to mammalian cells at physiological concentrations.

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY biohackers, LL‑37 could serve as a non‑viral carrier to deliver plasmid DNA into cells, potentially simplifying gene‑expression experiments. However, the study provides no ready‑to‑use dosing or protocol details, and safety in whole‑organism contexts remains untested, so further experimentation is needed before real‑world application.

Summary

The human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can grab free DNA plasmids, protect them from being broken down, and ferry them into the nucleus of mammalian cells using special membrane areas called lipid rafts and surface sugars, all without hurting the host cells at normal levels.

Abstract

Antimicrobial peptides, such as LL-37, are found both in nonvertebrates and vertebrates, where they represent important components of innate immunity. Bacterial infections at epithelial surfaces are associated with substantial induction of LL-37 expression, which allows efficient lysis of the invading microbes. Peptide-mediated lysis results in the release of bacterial nucleic acids with potential pathobiological activity in the host. Here, we demonstrate that LL-37 targets extracellular DNA plasmid to the nuclear compartment of mammalian cells, where it is expressed. DNA transfer occurred at physiological LL-37 concentrations that killed bacterial cells, whereas virtually no cytotoxic or growth-inhibitory effects were observed in mammalian cells. Furthermore, LL-37 protected DNA from serum nuclease degradation. LL-37.DNA complex uptake was a saturable time- and temperature-dependent process and was sensitive to cholesterol-depleting agents that are known to disrupt lipid rafts and caveolae, as shown by flow cytometry. Confocal fluorescence microscopy studies showed localization of internalized DNA to compartments stained by cholera toxin B, a marker of lipid rafts, but failed to demonstrate any co-localization of internalized DNA with caveolin-positive endocytotic vesicles. Moreover, LL-37-mediated plasmid uptake and reporter gene expression were strictly dependent on cell surface proteoglycans. We conclude that the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 binds to, protects, and efficiently targets DNA plasmid to the nuclei of mammalian cells through caveolae-independent membrane raft endocytosis and cell surface proteoglycans.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2004

Date

2004-02-11T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1074/jbc.m311440200