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Antimicrobial peptides are present in immune and host defense cells of the human respiratory and gastroinstestinal tracts
Authors:Jenny Wah  Anne Wellek  Marion Frankenberger  Pia Unterberger  Ulrich Welsch  Robert Bals
Affiliation:(1) Hospital of the University of Marburg, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Pulmonology, Philipps University Marburg, 35033 Marburg, Germany;(2) Department of Anatomy, Chair II, Ludwig Maximilian University, 80336 München, Germany;(3) Clinical Cooperation Group “Inflammatory Lung Diseases”, GSF-Institute for Inhalation Biology and Asklepios Fachklinik Gauting, 82131 Gauting, Germany;(4) Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Pneumonology, Hospital of the University of Marburg, Baldingerstrasse 1, 35043 Marburg, Germany
Abstract:Previous studies have implicated antimicrobial peptides in the host defense of the mammalian intestinal and respiratory tract. The aim of the present study has been to characterize further the expression of these molecules in non-epithelial cells of the human pulmonary and digestive systems by detailed immunohistochemical analysis of the small and large bowel and of the large airways and lung parenchyma. Additionally, cells obtained from bronchoalveolar lavage were analyzed by fluorescent activated cell sorting and immunostaining of cytospin preparations. hBD-1, hBD-2, and LL-37 were detected in lymphocytes and macrophages in the large airways, lung parenchyma, duodenum, and colon. Lymphocytes positive for the peptides revealed a staining pattern and distribution that largely matched that of CD3-positive and CD8-positive T-cells. Macrophages with positive staining for the antimicrobial peptides also stained positively for CD68 and CD74. In view of the morphology of the LL-37-positive and hBD-2-positive mucosal lymphocytes, they are probably also B-cells. Thus, antimicrobial peptides of the defensin and cathelicidin families are present in a variety of non-epithelial cells of mucosal organs. These findings confirm that antimicrobial peptides have multiple functions in the biology of the mucosa of these organs. This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Ba 1641/5–1 and Ba 1641/6–1)
Keywords:Antimicrobial peptide  Defensin  Innate immunity  Cathelicidin  Lung  Gastrointestinal tract  Host defense  Human
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