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Dihexa

N-(1-Oxohexyl)-L-tyrosyl-N-(6-amino-6-oxohexyl)-L-isoleucinamide, N-hexanoic-Tyr-Ile-(6) aminohexanoic amide, PNB-0408

Quick Stats
Studies 17
Trials 0
2007 pubmed 12 citations

Dimeric DOTA-alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone analogs: synthesis and in vivo characteristics of radiopeptides with high in vitro activity.

Bapst. Jean-Philippe JP; Froidevaux. Sylvie S; Calame. Martine M; Tanner. Heidi H; Eberle. Alex N AN

Key Findings

  • Dimeric alpha‑MSH analogs bind more strongly to melanoma receptors in vitro than the standard monomer.
  • In live mice, these dimers showed poor tumor uptake and much higher kidney accumulation.
  • The overall tumor‑to‑kidney ratio was far lower for the dimers compared to the monomeric DOTA‑NAPamide.

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY health enthusiasts, these findings don’t translate into any usable protocol or benefit. The study shows that, despite promising lab results, the dimer peptides aren’t effective for real‑world applications like cancer imaging or therapy, and they have no relevance to longevity, metabolism, or performance.

Summary

Scientists made special versions of a skin‑pigment hormone (alpha‑MSH) that stick better to melanoma cells in a dish, but when they tried them in mice they didn’t reach the tumors well and got stuck in the kidneys, making them worse than the original version for imaging cancer.

Abstract

Dimeric analogs of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) labeled with radiometals are potential candidates for diagnosis and therapy of melanoma by receptor-mediated tumor targeting. Both melanotic and amelanotic melanomas (over-)express the melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1-R), the target for alpha-MSH. In the past, dimerized MSH analogs have been shown to display increased receptor affinity compared to monomeric MSH, offering the possibility of improving the ratio between specific uptake of radiolabeled alpha-MSH by melanoma and nonspecific uptake by the kidneys. We have designed three linear dimeric analogs containing a slightly modified MSH hexapeptide core sequence (Nle-Asp-His-d-Phe-Arg-Trp) in parallel or antiparallel orientation, a short spacer, and the DOTA chelator for incorporation of the radiometal. In vitro, all three peptides were more potent ligands of the mouse B16-F1 melanoma cell melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1-R) than DOTA-NAPamide, which served as standard. The binding activity of DOTA-diHexa(NC-NC)-amide was 1.75-fold higher, that of diHexa(NC-NC)-Gly-Lys(DOTA)-amide was 3.37-fold higher, and that of DOTA-diHexa(CN-NC)-amide was 2.34-fold higher. Using human HBL melanoma cells, the binding activity of diHexa(NC-NC)-Gly-Lys(DOTA)-amide was sixfold higher than that of DOTA-NAPamide. Uptake by cultured B16-F1 cells was rapid and almost quantitative. In vivo, however, the data were less promising: tumor-to-kidney ratios 4 hr postinjection were 0.11 for [(111)In]DOTA-diHexa(NC-NC)-amide, 0.26 for diHexa(NC-NC)-Gly-Lys([(111)In]DOTA)-amide, and 0.36 for [(111)In]DOTA-diHexa(CN-NC)-amide, compared to 1.67 for [(111)In]DOTA-NAPamide. It appears that despite the higher affinity to the MC1-R of the peptide dimers and their excellent internalization in vitro, the uptake by melanoma tumors in vivo was lower, possibly because of reduced tissue penetration. More striking, however, was the marked increase of kidney uptake of the dimers, explaining the unfavorable ratios. In conclusion, although radiolabeled alpha-MSH dimer peptides display excellent receptor affinity and internalization, they are no alternative to the monomeric DOTA-NAPamide for in vivo application.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007

Date

2007-01-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1080/10799890701723528

Citations

12

References

78