The human antimicrobial and chemotactic peptides LL-37 and alpha-defensins are expressed by specific lymphocyte and monocyte populations.
Agerberth. B B; Charo. J J; Werr. J J; Olsson. B B; Idali. F F; Lindbom. L L; Kiessling. R R; Jörnvall. H H; Wigzell. H H; Gudmundsson. G H GH
Key Findings
- LL‑37 is expressed by NK cells, γδ T cells, B cells and monocytes/macrophages
- IL‑2 culture boosts LL‑37 secretion and IL‑6/IFN‑γ modulate its production
- LL‑37 has chemotactic activity for neutrophils and CD4+ T‑cells
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study suggests that stimulating the immune system (e.g., with cytokine‑like signals or vitamin D, which also raises LL‑37) could increase natural LL‑37 levels, potentially enhancing antimicrobial defense. However, the research does not provide dosing or direct supplementation protocols, so any LL‑37‑based interventions remain experimental.
Summary
The paper shows that human immune cells such as NK cells, certain T‑cells, B cells and monocytes can make the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, and that this peptide can attract other immune cells. Its production goes up after IL‑2 exposure and is further influenced by IL‑6 and interferon‑gamma.
Abstract
We identified antibacterial components in human T and natural killer (NK) cells by using freshly isolated lymphocytes enriched for T and NK cells as starting material. After growing these lymphocytes for 5 days in the presence of interleukin (IL)-2, we isolated and characterized several antibacterial peptides/proteins from the supernatant-alpha-defensins (HNP 1-3), LL-37, lysozyme, and a fragment of histone H2B-although other active components were also present. We then used reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction to search for expression of the gene coding for LL-37 in several B-cell lines, gammadelta T-cell lines, NK clones, and one monocytic cell line, with positive results, but found no expression in several alphabeta T-cell lines. The alpha-defensins (HNP 1-3) were also found to be expressed in several of these cell lines. To confirm the presence of these antibacterial peptides in lymphocytes, we localized them to NK, gammadelta T cells, B cells, and monocytes/macrophages by using double-staining immunohistochemical analysis of freshly isolated lymphocytes. We also found that primary cultures of lymphocytes transcribe and secrete LL-37 and that these processes are affected by IL-6 and interferon-gamma. In addition, we demonstrated that LL-37 has chemotactic activity for polymorphonuclear leukocytes and CD4 T lymphocytes, whereas others have shown chemotactic activity for human alpha-defensins (HNP 1-2). These findings suggest that microbicidal peptides are effector molecules of lymphocytes and that antibacterial activity previously shown to be derived from T and NK cells may be partly mediated by the antibacterial peptides LL-37 and HNP 1-3.
Study Information
pubmed
2000
2000-11-01T00:00:00.000Z