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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2009 pubmed

Upregulation of defensins in burn sheep small intestine.

Poindexter. Brian J BJ; Klein. Gordon L GL; Milner. Stephen M SM; Bick. Roger J RJ

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 and other defensins are present in all layers of the sheep small intestine, most concentrated in the epithelium.
  • Burn injury caused an increase of LL‑37 in the muscle layers of the gut but a decrease between those layers.
  • Other defensins (SBD‑2, SBD‑3, SNP‑1) were generally up‑regulated after burn injury, especially in enterocytes and Paneth cells.

Practical Outcomes

  • This research mainly shows how gut antimicrobial peptides react to severe injury in an animal model. It doesn’t provide direct guidance for supplementing LL‑37 or changing protocols for human health, but it hints that supporting gut barrier function could be important after trauma.

Summary

The study looked at a sheep gut after a burn injury and found that the natural antimicrobial protein LL‑37 and similar peptides are normally spread throughout the intestine, especially in the lining. After the burn, some of these peptides increased in certain gut layers while LL‑37 dropped in others, showing the body’s response to injury.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to visualize and localize the sheep antimicrobials, beta-defensins 1, 2, and 3, (SBD-1, SBD-2, SBD-3), sheep neutrophil defensin alpha (SNP-1), and the cathelicidin LL-37 in sheep small intestine after burn injury, our hypothesis being that these compounds would be upregulated in an effort to overcome a compromised endothelial lining. Response to burn injury includes the release of proinflammatory cytokines and systemic immune suppression that, if untreated, can progress to multiple organ failure and death, so protective mechanisms have to be initiated and implemented. Tissue sections were probed with antibodies to the antimicrobials and then visualized with fluorescently labeled secondary antibodies and subjected to fluorescence deconvolution microscopy and image reconstruction. In both the sham and burn samples, all the aforementioned antimicrobials were seen in each of the layers of small intestine, the highest concentration being localized to the epithelium. SBD-2, SBD-3, and SNP-1 were upregulated in both enterocytes and Paneth cells, while SNP-1 and LL-37 showed increases in both the inner circular and outer longitudinal muscle layers of the muscularis externa following burn injury. Each of the defensins, except SBD-1, was also seen in between the muscle layers of the externa and while burn caused slight increases of SBD-2, SBD-3, and SNP-1 in this location, LL-37 content was significantly decreased. That while each of these human antimicrobials is present in multiple layers of sheep small intestine, SBD-2, SBD-3, SNP-1, and LL-37 are upregulated in the specific layers of the small intestine.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-12-26T00:00:00.000Z