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ARA 290

Cibinetide, PHBSP, PH-BSP, Helix B surface peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 51
Trials 5
Score 2
2013 pubmed 26 citations

Potential role of erythropoietin receptors and ligands in attenuating apoptosis and inflammation in critical limb ischemia.

Joshi. Dhiraj D; Abraham. David D; Shiwen. Xu X; Baker. Daryl D; Tsui. Janice J

Key Findings

  • EPOR and CD131 receptors are present and up‑regulated in skeletal muscle of patients with critical limb ischemia.
  • In cultured muscle cells exposed to simulated ischemia, pretreatment with ARA 290 reduced apoptosis markers (cleaved caspase‑3) and cell death (LDH release).
  • ARA 290 also lowered the release of the inflammatory cytokine IL‑6 in the same in‑vitro ischemia model.

Practical Outcomes

  • ARA 290 shows promise as a non‑blood‑thickening way to protect muscle tissue during low‑oxygen events, but the evidence is limited to cell‑culture experiments. For biohackers, it suggests a potential future supplement for ischemia‑related issues, yet no dosing, safety, or human efficacy data are available, so it cannot yet be incorporated into real‑world protocols.

Summary

The study found that the peptide ARA 290, which mimics part of the hormone erythropoietin without causing blood clots, can protect muscle cells from death and inflammation when they are starved of oxygen in a lab setting. It also showed that the receptors these protective signals use are more abundant in the leg muscles of people with severe blood flow problems.

Abstract

Managing critical limb ischemia (CLI) is challenging. Furthermore, ischemic myopathy prevents good functional outcome after revascularization. Hence, we have focused on limiting the tissue damage rather than angiogenesis, which has traditionally been the motivation to develop nonsurgical treatments for CLI. Erythropoietin (EPO) protects ischemic tissue, and this property may also benefit CLI. The objective of this study was to examine the expression of the tissue-protective EPO receptor complex (EPOR-CD131 [β-chain of interleukin (IL)-3/IL-5/granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor]) in skeletal muscle obtained from humans with CLI. Because native EPO is thrombogenic, the antiapoptotic and anti-inflammatory effects of a nonhematopoietic helix-B peptide of EPO (ARA 290) were investigated on ischemic myotubes in vitro. Tissue was obtained from gastrocnemius muscle of 12 patients undergoing amputation for CLI and from 12 patients without limb ischemia. The expression of EPOR and CD131 was demonstrated by immunohistochemistry and Western blot. A validated in vitro model of myotube ischemia was used in which mature C2C12 myotubes were cultured 6 to 12 hours in a depleted media and gas mixture (20% CO2 and 80% N2). The myotubes were pretreated with EPO or ARA 290 before exposure to simulated ischemia. Apoptosis and cell death were determined by cleaved caspase-3 assay and lactate dehydrogenase release assay. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay measured the inflammatory cytokines. EPOR and CD131 were expressed and significantly upregulated in CLI (average optical density [OD] in Western blot [control vs CLI] EPOR, 0.05 U vs 0.1 U; CD131, 0.10 U vs 0.22 U; P < .01). There was colocalization of EPOR and CD131 in the sarcolemma (cell membrane) of the skeletal myofiber. There was no difference in the distribution of colocalization between the CLI and the normal muscle. The ischemic myotubes treated by ARA 290 in vitro had a significantly decreased number of apoptotic cells (ischemia vs ischemia plus ARA 290: 71.1% vs 55.1%; P < .01), cleaved caspase-3 (OD of ischemia vs ischemia plus ARA 290: 0.15 U vs 0.02 U; P < .01), lactate dehydrogenase release (ischemia vs ischemia plus ARA 290: 32.5 U/L vs 21.3 U/L; P < .01), and IL-6 release (OD at 450 nm, ischemia vs ischemia plus ARA 290: 0.18 vs 0.13; P < .01). This study demonstrates the expression and the upregulation of EPOR and CD131 in CLI and also shows that EPOR and CDI are colocalized in the cell membrane of both ischemic and control muscle fiber. The in vitro experiments demonstrate that ARA 290 decreases inflammation and apoptosis of ischemic myotubes. ARA 290 may potentially be used as adjunctive treatment for CLI.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-09-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.jvs.2013.06.054

Citations

26

References

36