2 results match your criteria: "and Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare Center[Affiliation]"
J Immunol
April 2005
Division of Dermatology, University of California, and Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare Center, San Diego, CA 92161, USA.
Cathelicidins and other antimicrobial peptides are deployed at epithelial surfaces to defend against infection. These molecules have broad-spectrum killing activity against microbes and can have effects on specific mammalian cell types, potentially stimulating additional immune defense through direct chemotactic activity or induction of cytokine release. In humans, the cathelicidin hCAP18/LL-37 is processed to LL-37 in neutrophils, but on skin it can be further proteolytically processed to shorter forms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Immunol
March 2004
Division of Dermatology, University of California, and Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare Center, San Diego, CA 92161, USA.
The production of antimicrobial peptides and proteins is essential for defense against infection. Many of the known human antimicrobial peptides are multifunctional, with stimulatory activities such as chemotaxis while simultaneously acting as natural antibiotics. In humans, eccrine appendages express DCD and CAMP, genes encoding proteins processed into the antimicrobial peptides dermcidin and LL-37.
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