Division of Pulmonary Diseases and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States of America.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Feb 27;14(2):e0212628. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212628. eCollection 2019.
Cathelicidin (also known as LL-37 in humans) is an antimicrobial peptide secreted by epithelial and immune cells and regulated by vitamin D. The immunological roles of cathelicidin make it a putative biomarker to identify individuals at risk for reduced lung function. The objective of this study is to determine potential independent associations between low plasma cathelicidin and longitudinal lung function in current or former smokers without COPD.
In a nested analysis of 308 participants from an observational cohort study, plasma cathelicidin and serum 25-hydroxy-vitamin D measurements were obtained at baseline, years three and five. The independent association between lowest quartile cathelicidin (<35 ng/ml) and forced-expiratory-volume-in-1-second (FEV1) at baseline, six and 18 months from each cathelicidin measurement was assessed with generalized estimating equations after adjusting for age, sex, race, smoking status and intensity. The long-term stability of cathelicidin and relationship with vitamin D was evaluated.
The cohort was 91% African-American, mean age 48.6 years, 32% female, and 81% current smokers. Participants with low cathelicidin were more likely to be female and have lower FEV1. Low cathelicidin was not independently associated with baseline FEV1. There was an independent association between low cathelicidin and reduced FEV1 at six months [-72 ml (95% CI, -140 to -8ml); p = 0.027] and 18 months [-103 ml (95% CI, -180 to -27 ml); p = 0.007]. Cathelicidin was stable over time and not correlated with vitamin D level.
In current and former smokers with preserved lung function, low cathelicidin is associated with sustained lung function reductions at six and 18 months, suggesting that cathelicidin may be an informative biomarker to predict persistent lung function disparities among at-risk individuals.
抗菌肽(在人类中也被称为 LL-37)是由上皮细胞和免疫细胞分泌的一种抗菌肽,受维生素 D 调节。抗菌肽的免疫作用使其成为识别肺功能下降风险个体的潜在生物标志物。本研究旨在确定在没有 COPD 的当前或以前的吸烟者中,低血浆抗菌肽与纵向肺功能之间潜在的独立关联。
在一项观察性队列研究的 308 名参与者的嵌套分析中,在基线、第 3 年和第 5 年获得了血浆抗菌肽和血清 25-羟维生素 D 测量值。在调整年龄、性别、种族、吸烟状况和强度后,使用广义估计方程评估最低四分位抗菌肽(<35ng/ml)与基线时、每次抗菌肽测量后 6 个月和 18 个月时的 1 秒用力呼气量(FEV1)之间的独立关联。评估了抗菌肽的长期稳定性及其与维生素 D 的关系。
队列中 91%为非裔美国人,平均年龄 48.6 岁,32%为女性,81%为当前吸烟者。低抗菌肽的参与者更有可能是女性,并且 FEV1 较低。低抗菌肽与基线 FEV1 无独立关联。低抗菌肽与 6 个月时的 FEV1 下降[72ml(95%CI,-140 至-8ml);p=0.027]和 18 个月时的 FEV1 下降[103ml(95%CI,-180 至-27ml);p=0.007]有独立关联。抗菌肽随时间稳定,与维生素 D 水平无关。
在肺功能正常的当前和以前的吸烟者中,低抗菌肽与 6 个月和 18 个月时的持续肺功能下降相关,这表明抗菌肽可能是预测高危个体持续肺功能差异的有价值的生物标志物。