1. Academic Validation
  2. Defensins: natural component of human innate immunity

Defensins: natural component of human innate immunity

  • Hum Immunol. 2013 Sep;74(9):1069-79. doi: 10.1016/j.humimm.2013.05.008.
Justyna Jarczak 1 Ewa M Kościuczuk Paweł Lisowski Nina Strzałkowska Artur Jóźwik Jarosław Horbańczuk Józef Krzyżewski Lech Zwierzchowski Emilia Bagnicka
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Institute of Genetics and Animal Breeding, Polish Academy of Sciences in Jastrzębiec, Poland.
Abstract

The widespread use of Antibiotics has contributed to a huge increase in the number of resistant bacteria. New classes of drugs are therefore being developed of which defensins are a potential source. Defensins are a group of antimicrobial Peptides found in different living organisms, involved in the first line of defense in their innate immune response against pathogens. This review summarizes the results of studies of this family of human antimicrobial Peptides (AMPs). There is a special emphasis on describing the entire group and individual Peptides, history of their discovery, their functions and expression sites. The results of the recent studies on the use of the biologically active Peptides in human medicine are also presented. The pharmaceutical potential of human defensins cannot be ignored, especially considering their strong antimicrobial activity and properties such as low molecular weight, reduced immunogenicity, broad activity spectrum and resistance to proteolysis, but there are still many challenges and questions regarding the possibilities of their practical application.

Keywords

AMP; BAC; BLAST; BOS; CMV; Cys; DEFA; DEFB; ECHO; ELISA; HIV; HMM; HSV; PMN; RTD; a.a; alpha defensin; amino acids; antimicrobial peptides; bacterial artificial chromosome; basic local alignment search tool; beta defensin; broncholitis obliteraus syndrome; cysteine; cytomegalovirus; enteric cytopathogenic human orphan virus; enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; herpes simplex virus; hidden markov model; human immunodeficiency virus; polymorphonuclear neutrophiles; rhesus theta defensin.

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