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ARA 290

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

Quick Stats
Studies 51
Trials 5
Score 2
2020 pubmed

Improvement of Islet Allograft Function Using Cibinetide, an Innate Repair Receptor Ligand.

Yao. Ming M; Watanabe. Masaaki M; Sun. Sune S; Tokodai. Kazuaki K; Cerami. Anthony A; Brines. Michael M; Östenson. Claes-Göran CG; Ericzon. Bo-Göran BG; Lundgren. Torbjörn T; Kumagai-Braesch. Makiko M

Key Findings

  • Cibinetide lowered liver inflammation right after islet transplantation and improved blood sugar control in mice.
  • The peptide delayed the loss of the transplanted cells, and when paired with low‑dose tacrolimus, it significantly increased long‑term graft survival.
  • In lab tests, Cibinetide reduced the maturation of immature dendritic cells, which likely dampened the immune response against the transplant.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, the study shows that ara‑290 can act as a potent anti‑inflammatory agent in a very specific transplant setting, but it does not provide a ready‑to‑use protocol for general health or longevity. The findings suggest potential for combining low‑dose immune modulators with ara‑290, yet human safety, dosing, and real‑world applicability remain untested.

Summary

In mice that received pancreas cell transplants, a peptide called Cibinetide (also known as ara-290) reduced early inflammation and helped the transplanted cells work better. When combined with a low dose of the immunosuppressant tacrolimus, it also extended the survival of the transplanted cells over the long term.

Abstract

During intraportal pancreatic islet transplantation (PITx), early inflammatory reactions cause an immediate loss of more than half of the transplanted graft and potentiate subsequent allograft rejection. Previous findings suggest that cibinetide, a selective innate repair receptor agonist, exerts islet protective and antiinflammatory properties and improved transplant efficacy in syngeneic mouse PITx model. In a stepwise approach toward a clinical application, we have here investigated the short- and long-term effects of cibinetide in an allogeneic mouse PITx model. Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6N (H-2) mice were transplanted with 320 (marginal) or 450 (standard) islets from BALB/c (H-2) mice via the portal vein. Recipients were treated perioperative and thereafter daily during 14 d with cibinetide (120 µg/kg), with or without tacrolimus injection (0.4 mg/kg/d) during days 4-14 after transplantation. Graft function was assessed using nonfasting glucose measurements. Relative gene expressions of proinflammatory cytokines and proinsulin of the graft-bearing liver were assessed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Cibinetide's effects on dendritic cell maturation were investigated in vitro. Cibinetide ameliorated the local inflammatory responses in the liver and improved glycemic control immediately after allogeneic PITx and significantly delayed the onset of allograft loss. Combination treatment with cibinetide and low-dose tacrolimus significantly improved long-term graft survival following allogeneic PITx. In vitro experiments indicated that cibinetide lowered bone-marrow-derived-immature-dendritic cell maturation and subsequently reduced allogeneic T-cell response. Cibinetide reduced the initial transplantation-related severe inflammation and delayed the subsequent alloreactivity. Cibinetide, in combination with low-dose tacrolimus, could significantly improve long-term graft survival in allogeneic PITx.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

DOI

10.1097/tp.0000000000003284