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LL-37

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

An antimicrobial peptide of the cathelicidin family that provides innate immune defense by killing pathogens and modulating inflammation and wound healing.

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Formula C205H340N60O53
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Utility 4
pubmed May 28, 2025

Engineered lipid nanoparticles loaded with LL-37 peptide as inhalable drug delivery carriers for the treatment of bacterial infections.

Reczyńska-Kolman. Katarzyna K; Ochońska. Dorota D; Brzychczy-Włoch. Monika M; Pamu...

Scientists made tiny fat‑based particles that can carry the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 straight into the lungs. These particles are small enough to slip through mucus, are safe for lung cells, and need a much lower amount of LL‑37 to break down harmful Pseudomonas biofilms compared to the peptide alone, making inhaled treatment more practical.

Utility 4
pubmed Oct 30, 2025

Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis BLa80 for preventing allergic, respiratory, and gastrointestinal diseases in young children in China: a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial.

Chen. Ke K; Zhang. Xi X; Zeng. Kaihong K; Zhong. Jiayi J; Jin. Shanshan S; Nie. Yang Y; Yang. Ping P...

Giving kids aged 0‑3 a daily probiotic powder (Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis BLa80) at 5 × 10âč CFU for three months cut down eczema, colds and throat infections, changed gut bacteria in a good way, and lowered certain gut immune proteins, with no serious side effects.

Utility 4
pubmed Apr 9, 2024

Development of a defibrinated human blood hemolysis assay for rapid testing of hemolytic activity compared to computational prediction.

Carpenter. Ashley M AM; van Hoek. Monique L ML

The researchers found that testing the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 with regular blood that’s been treated with EDTA makes it look more toxic than it really is. By using blood that’s had the clotting proteins removed (defibrinated blood), they got a clearer, more reliable picture of how much the peptide actually damages red blood cells. They’ve turned this into a simple, repeatable lab method that anyone can use to check the safety of similar compounds.

Utility 4
pubmed Mar 14, 2024

Enhancement of innate immunity in gingival epithelial cells by vitamin D and HDAC inhibitors.

Figgins. Erika L EL; Arora. Payal P; Gao. Denny D; Porcelli. Emily E; Ahmed. Rabab R; Daep. Carlo Am...

Applying a simple vitamin D supplement (the inactive form you can buy over‑the‑counter) together with a small amount of a butyrate compound (like sodium butyrate, found in some supplements) to the gums can boost the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37. This combo makes gum cells better at fighting the bad bacteria that cause gum disease and even reduces viral infection, suggesting a cheap, easy topical gel or rinse could help keep your mouth healthier.

Utility 4
pubmed Jul 22, 2023

Efficacy of LL-37 cream in enhancing healing of diabetic foot ulcer: a randomized double-blind controlled trial.

Miranda. Eliza E; Bramono. Kusmarinah K; Yunir. Em E; Reksodiputro. Mirta H MH; Suwarsa. Oki O; Reng...

A study on people with diabetic foot ulcers showed that applying a cream containing the peptide LL‑37 twice a week for four weeks helped the wounds form new tissue faster than a placebo, but it didn’t lower inflammation markers or kill more bacteria.

Utility 4
pubmed Jun 1, 2023

Reduction of Erythema in Moderate-Severe Rosacea by a Low Molecular Weight Heparan Sulfate Analog (HSA).

George. Rosalyn R; Gallo. Richard L RL; Cohen. Joel L JL; Brown. Madeline M; Okeke. Chidubem A V CAV...

A special cream containing a tiny version of heparan sulfate (HSA) can bind the LL‑37 peptide that drives rosacea inflammation, lowering skin redness and making laser skin treatments easier. In a small study, people with moderate‑severe rosacea who used the cream alongside laser therapy saw noticeable improvement in facial erythema over 8 weeks.

Utility 4
pubmed Dec 7, 2022

Lactobacilli Downregulate Transcription Factors in <i>Helicobacter pylori</i> That Affect Motility, Acid Tolerance and Antimicrobial Peptide Survival.

Zuo. Fanglei F; Somiah. Tanvi T; Gebremariam. Hanna G HG; Jonsson. Ann-Beth AB

A study found that substances released by the probiotic Lactobacillus gasseri can turn off key genes in Helicobacter pylori, making the bacteria less mobile, less able to survive stomach acid, and more vulnerable to the body’s own antimicrobial peptide LL‑37. This means that adding L. gasseri (as a supplement or fermented food) could help your gut fight H. pylori and boost the natural killing power of LL‑37.

Utility 4
pubmed Jul 11, 2022

A stable cyclized antimicrobial peptide derived from LL-37 with host immunomodulatory effects and activity against uropathogens.

White. John Kerr JK; Muhammad. Taj T; Alsheim. Emelie E; Mohanty. Soumitra S; Blasi-Romero. Anna A;...

A new synthetic version of the natural peptide LL‑37, called CD4‑PP, can kill the main bacteria that cause urinary‑tract infections at very low doses without hurting human cells. It also stops these bugs from forming sticky biofilms and can even break down biofilms that are already there. In addition, it nudges bladder cells to make more of their own LL‑37 and tightens the cell barrier, and coating catheters with the peptide reduces bacterial sticking.

Utility 4
pubmed Oct 31, 2022

17BIPHE2, an engineered cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide with low susceptibility to proteases, is an effective spermicide and microbicide against Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

Lee. Seung Gee SG; Kiattiburut. Wongsakorn W; Khongkha. Thitiporn T; Schinkel. Stephanie C Burke SCB...

Researchers made a tweaked version of the natural peptide LL‑37 called 17BIPHE2. In lab tests it kills human sperm faster than LL‑37 or a shorter piece of it, especially in cervicovaginal fluid, because it resists being broken down by enzymes. It also kills the STI bug Neisseria gonorrhoeae at the same dose and doesn’t harm mouse reproductive tissue, with fertility returning after treatment stops. The peptide still needs a delivery system (like a gel) before it can be used in people.

Utility 4
pubmed Oct 19, 2021

The Small Metal-Binding Protein SmbP Simplifies the Recombinant Expression and Purification of the Antimicrobial Peptide LL-37.

Perez-Perez. David A DA; Villanueva-Ramirez. Teresa de J TJ; Hernandez-Pedraza. Adriana E AE; Casill...

Researchers found a way to make the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 in bacteria using a small carrier protein called SmbP, which keeps the peptide soluble and lets you pull it out with just one purification step, then cut it free with an enzyme. They got about 3.6 mg of peptide per liter of culture and showed it still kills common bacteria like Staph aureus and E. coli.

Utility 4
pubmed Feb 9, 2023

Induction of Endogenous Antimicrobial Peptides to Prevent or Treat Oral Infection and Inflammation.

Morio. Kimberly A KA; Sternowski. Robert H RH; Brogden. Kim A KA

The paper reviews how the body’s own mouth‑fighting proteins (like LL‑37) can be turned on by things you can eat or apply, such as certain vitamins, minerals, amino‑rich foods, thyroid hormone, and specific light treatments. Boosting these natural antibiotics may help keep the mouth healthy, cut down infection, inflammation, pain, and speed up healing without relying on drugs.

Utility 4
pubmed Jan 11, 2022

Emerging Roles of Vitamin D-Induced Antimicrobial Peptides in Antiviral Innate Immunity.

White. John H JH

The paper explains that vitamin D helps your body make antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37, which not only fight bacteria but also have antiviral effects, including against COVID‑19. Low vitamin D means less LL‑37 and weaker innate immunity, so keeping vitamin D levels up could boost your natural defenses.

Utility 4
pubmed Jan 5, 2022

25-Hydroxyvitamin D potentializes extracellular cathelicidin release from human PBMC stimulated ex vivo with either bacterial (LPS) or viral (P: IC) mimetics.

Aldekwer. Sahar S; Goncalves-Mendes. Nicolas N; Bingula. Rea R; Martinroche. Guillaume G; Lanchais....

Taking enough vitamin D (aiming for blood levels around 75‑125 ng/mL) can boost the cells that make the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, but the peptide only gets released outside the cells when the immune system is activated by something like a bacterial or viral trigger. In plain terms, higher vitamin D may help your body’s natural antibiotics kick in faster during an infection, but it won’t raise baseline LL‑37 levels on its own.

Utility 4
pubmed 2020

[Dynamics of immune and biochemical features of oral fluid in persons with caries receiving vitamin D].

Putneva. A S AS; Karavaeva. T M TM; Maximenya. M V MV; Fefelova. E V EV; Borodulina. I I II; Tereshk...

In young adults with cavities and low vitamin D, taking a regular dose of cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) raised the levels of the antimicrobial peptide LL-37 and other immune markers in saliva, while also improving antioxidant balance. This suggests that checking your vitamin D status and supplementing if low could help protect your teeth and gums.

Utility 4
pubmed Aug 27, 2020

Seasonal Antimicrobial Activity of the Airway: Post-Hoc Analysis of a Randomized Placebo-Controlled Double-Blind Trial.

Vargas Buonfiglio. Luis G LG; Vanegas Calderon. Oriana G OG; Cano. Marlene M; Simmering. Jacob E JE;...

The study shows that your airway’s natural antibacterial defense is stronger in summer when vitamin D levels are higher, and weaker in winter. Taking a modest vitamin D3 supplement (1000 IU daily for three months) during the colder months can boost this defense by increasing the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, helping your lungs kill bacteria more effectively.

Utility 4
pubmed Jul 26, 2019

Eradication of meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus from human skin by the novel LL-37-derived peptide P10 in four pharmaceutical ointments.

Nibbering. Peter H PH; G&#xf6;bly&#xf6;s. Anik&#xf3; A; Adriaans. Alwin E AE; Cordfunke. Robert A RA...

Researchers made a new peptide called P10 (based on the natural LL‑37) and tested it in four different ointment bases. They found that P10 stays stable and kills MRSA bacteria best when mixed into a hypromellose gel, while it works less well or not at all in the other creams. The peptide didn’t harm skin cells in the lab, and higher doses cleared more bacteria.

Utility 4
pubmed Feb 25, 2019

Activation of vitamin D in the gingival epithelium and its role in gingival inflammation and alveolar bone loss.

Menzel. Lorenzo P LP; Ruddick. Willam W; Chowdhury. Mobaswar H MH; Brice. David C DC; Clance. Ryan R...

The study shows that lacking vitamin D makes gums more inflamed and causes bone loss, while applying vitamin D (or its active form) directly to the gums reduces inflammation and stops harmful bacteria from growing inside gum cells. Your gum cells can even turn inactive vitamin D into the active version themselves, meaning a topical vitamin D treatment could work right where it’s needed.

Utility 4
pubmed Nov 23, 2018

Vitamin D attenuates rhinovirus-induced expression of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) and platelet-activating factor receptor (PAFR) in respiratory epithelial cells.

Greiller. Claire L CL; Suri. Reetika R; Jolliffe. David A DA; Kebadze. Tatiana T; Hirsman. Aurica G...

Taking enough vitamin D (the form that circulates in your blood) can make your airway cells a bit more resistant to the common cold virus and may also lower the chance of getting a follow‑up bacterial infection. It does this by boosting the body’s own antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and dampening the cell‑surface proteins that the virus and bacteria use to stick to your lungs.

Utility 4
pubmed Sep 10, 2018

Clarithromycin Enhances the Antibacterial Activity and Wound Healing Capacity in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus by Increasing LL-37 Load on Neutrophil Extracellular Traps.

Arampatzioglou. Athanasios A; Papazoglou. Dimitrios D; Konstantinidis. Theocharis T; Chrysanthopoulo...

In people with type‑2 diabetes whose blood sugar is under control, the antibiotic clarithromycin makes neutrophils release more of the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 on their DNA webs (NETs). This extra LL‑37 gives the NETs the ability to kill bacteria and also helps skin cells grow and heal wounds faster.

Utility 4
pubmed May 7, 2018

Reduction of respiratory infections in asthma patients supplemented with vitamin D is related to increased serum IL-10 and IFN&#x3b3; levels and cathelicidin expression.

Ramos-Mart&#xed;nez. E E; L&#xf3;pez-Vancell. M R MR; Fern&#xe1;ndez de C&#xf3;rdova-Aguirre. J C JC...

Giving asthma patients vitamin D (as calcitriol) for six months boosted their immune signaling (more IL‑10 and IFN‑γ), lowered allergy‑related cytokines, raised the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 in the lungs, and cut down how often they got respiratory infections.