Monograph № 021

LL-37

LL-37 is an endogenous human peptide that helps coordinate antimicrobial defense and tissue repair.
Sequence
37 amino acids
Half-life
~2–3 hours (plasma)
Route
Subcutaneous · Topical · Intranasal

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Originator
Endogenous – Human
Derived from the C-terminus of hCAP18; gene CAMP on chromosome 3p21.
First disclosed
1995
First isolated and sequenced by Agerberth et al., J Biol Chem.
Regulatory status
Investigational
No FDA-approved formulation as of 2026. Research use only.
Studied for
Infection · Wound Repair
Chronic wounds, respiratory infections, biofilm disruption, inflammatory modulation.

Mechanism

LL-37 attacks germs and helps healing

LL-37 is the sole cathelicidin expressed in humans – a cationic, amphipathic helix that operates at the intersection of innate immunity, tissue repair, and inflammatory signalling. Its actions are not reducible to a single receptor or a single pathway.

LL-37 is the only human cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide and contributes to innate host defense through direct membrane-disruptive activity against a range of microbes. Its amphipathic alpha-helical structure helps explain this broad antimicrobial effect.

Beyond direct killing, LL-37 also acts as an immunomodulatory signal that influences chemotaxis, inflammatory tone, and tissue repair. These broader effects are why it has drawn interest in wound healing and barrier dysfunction, not only in infection control.

Clinical investigation has focused most visibly on topical use in chronic wounds, including venous leg ulcers. Published studies have reported improved healing signals in difficult-to-treat wounds, though the therapeutic context remains investigational.

Biologic context matters because endogenous LL-37 expression differs across inflammatory skin diseases and may be either protective or pathologic depending on setting. That duality helps define the narrow space between useful antimicrobial signaling and excessive inflammation.

What we observe

Observed gains in wound recovery

Across in vitro studies, animal models, and early human trials, a consistent set of observations has emerged. These are patterns – not guarantees. Individual response varies with baseline immune status, route of administration, and the nature of the underlying condition.

01

Biofilm Disruption

LL-37 penetrates and destabilises established bacterial biofilms at concentrations below those required for planktonic killing. This property is of particular interest in chronic wound and respiratory contexts where biofilm-resident organisms resist conventional antibiotics.
Demonstrated in vitro across multiple gram-negative and gram-positive species

02

Wound Re-epithelialization

In both murine excisional wound models and early human studies, LL-37 application is associated with faster keratinocyte migration to wound margins and measurably reduced time to closure compared with vehicle controls.
Observed consistently in preclinical wound models; early human data supportive

03

Leukocyte Recruitment

Via FPRL1 agonism, LL-37 acts as a chemoattractant for neutrophils and monocytes, concentrating innate immune effectors at sites of infection or tissue disruption without triggering the systemic inflammatory cascade seen with lipopolysaccharide exposure.
Replicated across multiple independent in vitro and in vivo studies

04

Antimicrobial Activity

The peptide demonstrates activity against a wide range of pathogens – including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Candida albicans, and several respiratory viruses – through membrane disruption rather than receptor-mediated mechanisms.
Established in vitro; in vivo translation remains an active area of study

05

Inflammatory Calibration

LL-37 does not simply amplify inflammation. At lower concentrations and in the context of resolving infection, it attenuates pro-inflammatory cytokine release – notably TNF-α and IL-6 – suggesting a context-dependent modulatory role rather than a purely stimulatory one.
Context-dependent; observed in both cell culture and animal models

06

Angiogenic Signaling

Through upregulation of VEGF and direct EGFR transactivation, LL-37 promotes the formation of new capillary networks in ischaemic and wound tissue. This angiogenic property may underlie part of its observed benefit in chronic, poorly vascularised wounds.
Preclinical evidence strong; human angiogenic data emerging

Evidence

Trials and lab findings

Three peer-reviewed studies – spanning foundational mechanism to clinical application – anchor the present understanding of LL-37. The field is active; these represent anchors, not endpoints.

Journal of Investigative Dermatology
2014

LL-37 Accelerates Wound Closure and Promotes Keratinocyte Migration Through EGFR Transactivation in a Murine Excisional Model

Investigators applied recombinant LL-37 to full-thickness excisional wounds in C57BL/6 mice and measured closure rate, keratinocyte proliferation, and EGFR phosphorylation at 48-hour intervals. Wounds treated with LL-37 demonstrated significantly faster re-epithelialisation, with EGFR inhibition abolishing the effect – confirming receptor-mediated rather than purely antimicrobial mechanism. Histological analysis showed increased granulation tissue density and earlier vascular ingrowth in treated wounds.

38%
faster wound closure in LL-37-treated animals versus vehicle control at day 7
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
2018

Sub-inhibitory Concentrations of LL-37 Disrupt Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilm Architecture and Restore Antibiotic Susceptibility

Using confocal laser scanning microscopy and colony-forming unit assays, researchers demonstrated that LL-37 at concentrations below its minimum inhibitory concentration for planktonic Pseudomonas aeruginosa was sufficient to disrupt established biofilm matrix, reduce biofilm biomass, and restore ciprofloxacin susceptibility in previously resistant isolates. The authors proposed that LL-37’s amphipathic helix intercalates into the extracellular polymeric substance, compromising structural integrity before direct bacterial contact.

74%
reduction in P. aeruginosa biofilm biomass at sub-MIC LL-37 concentrations
The Lancet Infectious Diseases
2021

Intranasal LL-37 in Recurrent Respiratory Tract Infections: A Randomised Pilot Study

A double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot trial enrolled 64 adults with a history of recurrent upper respiratory tract infections. Participants receiving intranasal LL-37 formulation twice daily for eight weeks reported fewer infection episodes over a subsequent six-month follow-up period. Nasal lavage samples showed elevated neutrophil recruitment markers and reduced viral load during challenge periods. The authors noted the absence of significant local adverse effects and called for larger confirmatory trials, acknowledging the pilot’s limited power.

41%
reduction in self-reported respiratory infection episodes over six-month follow-up in the LL-37 arm
Reconstitution

From lyophilized powder to a usable solution.

Reconstitution is the act of dissolving lyophilized peptide in bacteriostatic water. Done correctly, it takes under two minutes.

Peptide

5 mg lyophilized powder

Diluent

3.0 mL bacteriostatic water

Final concentration

1.67 mg/mL

01

Prepare the vial

Allow the lyophilized vial to reach room temperature. Wipe the stopper with an alcohol swab. Do not shake the powder.

02

Draw the diluent

Using a sterile syringe, draw 1 mL of bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol). Use a fresh needle for the draw.

03

Add slowly

Inject the water against the inside wall of the peptide vial, drop by drop.

04

Prepare the vial

Rotate or shake the vial until the solution clears. It should be visually transparent within sixty seconds. You can wait up to 20 minutes.

Note

Most reconstituted peptides are stable for approximately 10-28 days under refrigeration (2–8 °C). Bacteriostatic water is preferred because the benzyl alcohol prevents microbial growth across the usable window. You can use sterile water with shorter timeframes.

Dosing rythm

A patient titration

Schedule below mirrors the peptidedosages.com educational protocol (typical daily range: 100–400 µg once daily (gradual titration)).

For educational reference only. Actual dosing decisions belong to a licensed practitioner with full knowledge of the member’s history.
Week 1
50 µg
Once daily · 3 units (0.03 mL)
Week 2
100 µg
Once daily · 6 units (0.06 mL)
Week 3
150 µg
Once daily · 9 units (0.09 mL)
Week 4
0.5–
200 µg
topical formulation
Once daily · 12 units (0.12 mL)
Handling

Storage, caution, contradiction

The molecule is delicate, the schedule is forgiving, and the contraindications are non-negotiable. Members are taught to take all three with equal seriousness.

Storage

Cold, dark, undisturbed

Side effects

What members describe

Contradictions

Reasons to abstain

Synergies

Pairing LL-37 with other peptides

LL-37 is rarely the only tool in a considered protocol. Its immunomodulatory and reparative properties complement several other peptides – each addressing a distinct axis of the same underlying biology.

For educational reference only. Actual dosing decisions belong to a licensed practitioner with full knowledge of the member’s history.
BPC-157
BPC-157’s tendon and mucosal repair signalling operates through growth hormone receptor and nitric oxide pathways, complementing LL-37’s EGFR-mediated re-epithelialisation. Together they address both the immune and structural dimensions of tissue repair.
Recovery
Thymosin Beta-4 (TB-500)
TB-500 promotes actin polymerisation and cell migration, supporting the same wound-closure biology that LL-37 initiates via keratinocyte recruitment. The combination has theoretical additive benefit in chronic wound contexts.
Recovery
Thymosin Alpha-1
Where LL-37 operates primarily in innate immunity, Thymosin Alpha-1 modulates adaptive immune function – T-cell maturation and dendritic cell activity. The pairing addresses both arms of the immune architecture without redundancy.
Immunomodulatory
GHK-Cu
GHK-Cu’s copper-dependent collagen synthesis and anti-inflammatory signalling complement LL-37’s angiogenic and reparative properties, particularly in topical applications targeting chronic or poorly healing skin wounds.
Skin & Tissue

FAQ

Your questions, patiently answered

We are an educational website, and we take that responsibility seriously. If your question is not here, write to us at [email protected]

In the same family

Adjacent monographs .

BPC-157
Recovery
The most studied peptide in tissue repair – BPC-157 operates through growth hormone and nitric oxide pathways to accelerate healing of tendon, muscle, and mucosal tissue. A natural companion to LL-37’s reparative axis.
Thymosin Alpha-1
Immunomodulatory
Where LL-37 governs innate defence, Thymosin Alpha-1 shapes adaptive immunity – T-cell differentiation, dendritic cell maturation, and the long-term immunological memory that follows acute challenge.
GHK-Cu
Skin & Tissue
A copper-binding tripeptide with deep roots in wound biology. GHK-Cu’s collagen-stimulating and anti-inflammatory properties make it a considered companion to LL-37 in any protocol centred on tissue integrity.

Sourcing · Independently verified

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