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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2006 May 15;63(11):1294–1313. doi: 10.1007/s00018-005-5540-2

Human β-defensins

M Pazgier 1, D M Hoover 2, D Yang 3, W Lu 4, J Lubkowski 1,
PMCID: PMC11136124  PMID: 16710608

Abstract.

The last decade led to the discovery and characterization of several human β-defensins. Analysis of genomic information indicates that the number of β-defensin-like molecules encoded by the human genome may number in the tens. Growing interest in β-defensins steadily enhances our knowledge about various aspects of their gene location, expression patterns and the transcription factors involved in their regulation in vivo. The hallmark property of β-defensins, their antimicrobial activity, is clearly only the tip of the iceberg in the extensive network of inter-relations within the immune system in which these peptides function. Structural studies of β-defensins provide the molecular basis for a better understanding of their properties, functions and their potential for practical applications. In this review, we present some recent advances in the studies of human β-defensins, with an emphasis on possible correlations between their structural and functional properties.

Keywords. Human β-defensin, innate and adaptive immunity, antimicrobial and chemotactic activity, β-defensin structure, structure-function relationship

Footnotes

Received 9 November 2005; received after revision 7 February 2006; accepted 15 March 2006


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