Latest News About Hepcidin Antimicrobial Peptide

Updated 2026-05-29 22:14

I can’t reliably pull very latest (e.g., last days/weeks) updates right now, but I can share the most recent lines of research I’m seeing from accessible sources: current work is focusing on hepcidin-derived peptides (“hamp” peptides in fish/invertebrate models) as potential antimicrobials—often with the key finding that different hepcidin variants (“hamp1” vs “hamp2”) can show very different antimicrobial and in-vivo infection outcomes.[2][3]

What recent research is emphasizing

Practical takeaway

If your goal is “latest news” for a project, the most actionable near-term theme to watch is hepcidin variant selection and delivery, because the evidence so far suggests you can’t assume “hepcidin = antimicrobial benefit” uniformly across variants.[3]

If you tell me 1 detail, I’ll narrow it

Which do you mean by “latest news”?

Also, do you want clinical trials/patents, new papers, or news coverage?

Sources

Hepcidin Is an Antibacterial, Stress-Inducible Peptide of the Biliary System

Background/Aims Hepcidin (gene name HAMP), an IL-6-inducible acute phase peptide with antimicrobial properties, is the key negative regulator of iron metabolism. Liver is the primary source of HAMP synthesis, but it is also produced by other tissues such as kidney or heart and is found in body fluids such as urine or cerebrospinal fluid. While the role of hepcidin in biliary system is unknown, a recent study demonstrated that conditional gp130-knockout mice display diminished hepcidin levels...

journals.plos.org

Identification of Antibacterial Activity of Hepcidin From ...

Hepcidin is a small peptide composed of signal peptide, propeptide, and the bioactive mature peptide from N terminal to C terminal. Mature hepcidin is an antibacterial peptide and iron regulator with eight highly conserved cysteines forming four ...

pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov