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Review
. 2025 Aug 7;26(15):7643.
doi: 10.3390/ijms26157643.

Pro-Dermcidin as an Emerging Regulator of Innate Immunity in Sepsis

Affiliations
Review

Pro-Dermcidin as an Emerging Regulator of Innate Immunity in Sepsis

Li Lou et al. Int J Mol Sci. .

Abstract

Human dermcidin (DCD) is synthesized as a 110-amino acid precursor (pre-dermcidin, pre-DCD) containing a 19-residue leader signal sequence, which is removed to produce a leader-less pro-domain-containing peptide termed as pro-dermcidin, pro-DCD. Pro-DCD can be secreted by human eccrine sweat glands and then cleaved into antimicrobial peptides, such as dermcidin (DCD). Emerging evidence suggests that pro-DCD has broader physiological roles beyond antimicrobial defense, potentially serving as a therapeutic agent for inflammatory diseases like sepsis. In this review, we summarize recent evidence supporting pro-DCD as a regulator of innate immunity in sepsis.

Keywords: anti-inflammatory; anti-microbial; innate immune cells; pro-dermcidin.

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Conflict of interest statement

H.W. is an inventor on U.S. patent 11,266,716 entitled “Use of dermcidin in sterile inflammatory conditions”. Other authors do not have any conflicts of interest to declare.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Amino acid sequence of human pro-dermcidin (pro-DCD) and epitope profile of anti-pro-DCD polyclonal antibodies. (A) Amino acid sequence and structural domains of human dermcidin precursor, pre-dermcidin (pre-DCD). (B) Amino acid sequence homology between human pro-DCD (20–110) and pro-DCD2 (20–121) isomer. (C) Sequence of synthetic peptides corresponding to various regions of human pro-DCD. (D) Epitope mapping of human pro-DCD-specific polyclonal antibodies by dot blotting analysis of recombinant pro-DCD and thirteen synthetic peptides (P1–P13) corresponding to different regions of pro-DCD. (E) Depiction of a peptide sequence (P9) that exhibits some homology to an inducible human acute-phase protein, serum amyloid A (SAA). Reprinted with permission from [9]. Copyright CC-BY, version 4.0.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Proposed role of pro-DCD in regulating innate immunity in sepsis. In response to severe bacterial infections, innate immune cells may upregulate and secrete pro-DCD into the bloodstream. Extracellular pro-DCD may confer protection against lethal sepsis partly by attenuating sepsis-induced dysregulated inflammatory injury and partly by facilitating systemic bacterial clearance possible via microtubule-associated protein 1A/1B-light chain 3 (LC3)-mediated phagocytosis and/or autophagy-dependent pathogen destruction. It remains to be determined whether pro-DCD loses its protective effects when LC3 is pharmacologically inhibited or genetically disrupted in future independent studies (“?”).

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