The new kisspeptin derivative - kissorphin (KSO) - attenuates acute hyperlocomotion and sensitization induced by ethanol and morphine in mice.
Gibula-Bruzda. Ewa E; Marszalek-Grabska. Marta M; Gawel. Kinga K; Trzcinska. Roza R; Silberring. Jerzy J; Kotlinska. Jolanta H JH
Key Findings
- KSO does not change normal movement in drug‑naïve mice.
- A single dose of KSO reduces the immediate hyperactivity caused by ethanol (10 nmol) and morphine (3‑10 nmol).
- Giving KSO before each drug exposure prevents both the development and the expression of locomotor sensitization to ethanol and morphine.
- Blocking NPFF receptors with RF9 stops KSO’s ability to reduce drug‑induced sensitization, indicating KSO works through NPFF‑like pathways.
- KSO does not impair motor coordination on the rotarod test.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in anti‑addiction strategies, KSO shows promise as a molecule that could blunt the acute and sensitizing effects of alcohol and opioids, but it has only been tested in mice with intravenous dosing. No human safety or efficacy data exist, so it cannot yet be used in real‑world protocols. The study mainly adds to the scientific understanding of NPFF‑like peptides and may guide future development of oral or injectable anti‑addiction compounds.
Summary
Researchers created a new peptide called kissorphin (KSO) from kisspeptin-10 and found that, in mice, it can calm down the extra activity caused by alcohol or morphine and can also block the development of increased sensitivity to these drugs after repeated use. The effect depends on the same receptors that natural neuropeptide FF uses, and it doesn't mess with basic motor skills.
Abstract
Kissorphin (KSO) is a new peptide derived from kisspeptin-10. This peptide possesses neuropeptide FF (NPFF)-like biological activity in vitro; NPFF, in many cases, inhibits opioid and ethanol effects in rodents. Therefore, the current study explored the influence of KSO on acute ethanol- and morphine-induced hyperactivity, and on the development and expression of locomotor sensitization induced by these drugs. In the present study, sensitization to locomotor effects was induced by repeated exposure to ethanol (2.4 g/kg, intraperitoneally [i.p.], 1 × 4 days) or morphine (10 mg/kg, subcutaneously [s.c.], 1 × 7 days). We found that KSO (1-10 nmol/300 μL, intravenously [i.v.]) did not have an impact on locomotor activity of naïve mice. However, it reduced both acute ethanol- (10 nmol/300 μL) and morphine-induced hyperactivity (3 and 10 nmol/300 μL). Pretreatment of animals with KSO (10 nmol/300 μL), before every ethanol or morphine injection during development of sensitization or before the ethanol or morphine challenge, attenuated the development, as well as the expression of locomotor sensitization to both substances. Moreover, prior administration of the NPFF receptor antagonist RF9 (10 nmol/300 μL, i.v.) inhibited the ability of KSO (10 nmol/300 μL) to reduce the expression of ethanol and morphine sensitization. KSO given alone, at all used doses, did not influence the motor coordination measured via the rotarod test. The results from this study show that KSO effectively attenuated acute and repeated effects of ethanol and morphine. Thus, KSO possesses NPFF-like anti-opioid activity in these behavioral studies.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-08-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.alcohol.2017.04.005
9
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