Findlay Fern, Pohl Jan, Svoboda Pavel, Shakamuri Priyanka, McLean Kevin, Inglis Neil F, Proudfoot Lorna, Barlow Peter G
School of Applied Sciences, Edinburgh Napier University, Edinburgh EH11 4BN, United Kingdom.
Biotechnology Core Facility Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333; and.
J Immunol. 2017 Oct 1;199(7):2483-2490. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1700706. Epub 2017 Aug 16.
Host defense peptides, also known as antimicrobial peptides, are key elements of innate host defense. One host defense peptide with well-characterized antimicrobial activity is the human cathelicidin, LL-37. LL-37 has been shown to be upregulated at sites of infection and inflammation and is regarded as one of the primary innate defense molecules against bacterial and viral infection. Human exposure to combustion-derived or engineered nanoparticles is of increasing concern, and the implications of nanomaterial exposure on the human immune response is poorly understood. However, it is widely acknowledged that nanoparticles can interact strongly with several immune proteins of biological significance, with these interactions resulting in structural and functional changes of the proteins involved. This study investigated whether the potent antibacterial and antiviral functions of LL-37 were inhibited by exposure to, and interaction with, carbon nanoparticles, together with characterizing the nature of the interaction. LL-37 was exposed to carbon black nanoparticles in vitro, and the antibacterial and antiviral functions of the peptide were subsequently assessed. We demonstrate a substantial loss of antimicrobial function when the peptide was exposed to low concentrations of nanomaterials, and we further show that the nanomaterial-peptide interaction resulted in a significant change in the structure of the peptide. The human health implications of these findings are significant, as, to our knowledge, this is the first evidence that nanoparticles can alter host defense peptide structure and function, indicating a new role for nanoparticle exposure in increased disease susceptibility.
宿主防御肽,也被称为抗菌肽,是先天性宿主防御的关键要素。一种具有明确抗菌活性的宿主防御肽是人类cathelicidin,即LL-37。LL-37已被证明在感染和炎症部位上调,被视为对抗细菌和病毒感染的主要先天性防御分子之一。人类接触燃烧产生的或工程化的纳米颗粒日益受到关注,而纳米材料暴露对人类免疫反应的影响却知之甚少。然而,人们普遍认为纳米颗粒可以与几种具有生物学意义的免疫蛋白强烈相互作用,这些相互作用会导致相关蛋白质的结构和功能发生变化。本研究调查了LL-37的强效抗菌和抗病毒功能是否会因接触碳纳米颗粒并与之相互作用而受到抑制,同时对相互作用的性质进行了表征。LL-37在体外与炭黑纳米颗粒接触,随后评估该肽的抗菌和抗病毒功能。我们证明,当该肽暴露于低浓度纳米材料时,其抗菌功能会大幅丧失,并且我们进一步表明,纳米材料与肽的相互作用导致肽的结构发生了显著变化。这些发现对人类健康具有重要意义,因为据我们所知,这是纳米颗粒可改变宿主防御肽结构和功能的首个证据,表明纳米颗粒暴露在增加疾病易感性方面具有新的作用。