Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Adipotide

Prohibitin-targeting peptide 1, Prohibitin-TP01, FTPP

Quick Stats
Studies 7
Trials 2
Score 3
2011 pubmed 90 citations

A peptidomimetic targeting white fat causes weight loss and improved insulin resistance in obese monkeys.

Barnhart. Kirstin F KF; Christianson. Dawn R DR; Hanley. Patrick W PW; Driessen. Wouter H P WH; Bernacky. Bruce J BJ; Baze. Wallace B WB; Wen. Sijin S; Tian. Mei M; Ma. Jingfei J; Kolonin. Mikhail G MG; Saha. Pradip K PK; Do. Kim-Anh KA; Hulvat. James F JF; Gelovani. Juri G JG; Chan. Lawrence L; Arap. Wadih W; Pasqualini. Renata R

Key Findings

  • Adipotide triggers targeted cell death in the blood vessels of white fat, shrinking fat tissue.
  • Monkeys lost weight rapidly and showed improved insulin resistance after treatment.
  • At optimal doses, the drug caused predictable, reversible changes in kidney proximal tubule function.

Practical Outcomes

  • While adipotide shows strong anti‑obesity effects in primates, it is still far from being a DIY or clinical option. The reversible kidney effects highlight the need for careful dosing and monitoring. Biohackers should view this as a promising research direction rather than an actionable protocol today.

Summary

In a study with obese monkeys, a synthetic peptide called adipotide was injected and caused the blood vessels that feed white fat cells to die. This led to a quick drop in body fat and better blood‑sugar control. The treatment also caused temporary, reversible changes in kidney function, showing both promise and safety concerns.

Abstract

Obesity, defined as body mass index greater than 30, is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality and a financial burden worldwide. Despite significant efforts in the past decade, very few drugs have been successfully developed for the treatment of obese patients. Biological differences between rodents and primates are a major hurdle for translation of anti-obesity strategies either discovered or developed in rodents into effective human therapeutics. Here, we evaluate the ligand-directed peptidomimetic CKGGRAKDC-GG-(D)(KLAKLAK)(2) (henceforth termed adipotide) in obese Old World monkeys. Treatment with adipotide induced targeted apoptosis within blood vessels of white adipose tissue and resulted in rapid weight loss and improved insulin resistance in obese monkeys. Magnetic resonance imaging and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry confirmed a marked reduction in white adipose tissue. At experimentally determined optimal doses, monkeys from three different species displayed predictable and reversible changes in renal proximal tubule function. Together, these data in primates establish adipotide as a prototype in a new class of candidate drugs that may be useful for treating obesity in humans.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-11-09T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1126/scitranslmed.3002621

Citations

90

References

44