Receptors for chemotactic formyl peptides as pharmacological targets.
Le. Yingying Y; Yang. Yiming Y; Cui. Youhong Y; Yazawa. Hiroshi H; Gong. Wanghua W; Qiu. Cunping C; Wang. Ji Ming JM
Key Findings
- LL‑37 acts as a chemotactic agonist for the low‑affinity formyl peptide receptor FPRL1.
- Activating these receptors boosts white‑blood‑cell movement, phagocytosis, and release of inflammatory molecules.
- Stimulation of FPR/FPRL1 can desensitize other receptors (CCR5, CXCR4) that HIV uses to enter cells.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, the main takeaway is that LL‑37 influences immune signaling, but the research does not provide safe dosage ranges or clear health protocols. Until more applied studies appear, using LL‑37 as a supplement remains speculative and should be approached with caution.
Summary
The study explains that a natural peptide called LL‑37 can bind to special receptors on white blood cells, triggering inflammation and affecting other immune signals. This interaction might influence how the body fights infections and could impact diseases like HIV, but the paper doesn’t give any dosing tips or direct ways to use LL‑37 for health improvement.
Abstract
Leukocytes accumulate at sites of inflammation and immunological reaction in response to locally existing chemotactic mediators. N-formyl peptides, such as fMet-Leu-Phe (fMLF), are some of the first identified and most potent chemoattractants for phagocytic leukocytes. In addition to the bacterial peptide fMLF and the putative endogenously produced formylated peptides, a number of novel peptide agonists have recently been identified that selectively activate the high-affinity fMLF receptor FPR and/or its low-affinity variant FPRL1, both of which belong to the seven-transmembrane (STM), G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily. These agonists include peptide domains derived from the envelope proteins of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and at least three amyloidogenic polypeptides, the human acute phase protein serum amyloid A, the 42 amino acid form of beta amyloid peptide and a 21 amino acid fragment of human prion. Furthermore, a cleavage fragment of neutrophil granule-derived bactericidal cathelicidin, LL-37, is also a chemotactic agonist for FPRL1. Activation of formyl peptide receptors results in increased cell migration, phagocytosis, release of proinflammatory mediators, and the signaling cascade culminates in heterologous desensitization of other STM receptors including chemokine receptors CCR5 and CXCR4, two coreceptors for HIV-1. Thus, by interacting with a variety of exogenous and host-derived agonists, formyl peptide receptors may play important roles in proinflammatory and immunological diseases and constitute a novel group of pharmacological targets.
Study Information
pubmed
2002
10.1016/s1567-5769(01)00150-3