Discovery of novel regulatory peptides by reverse pharmacology: spotlight on chemerin and the RF-amide peptides metastin and QRFP.
Kutzleb. Christian C; Busmann. Annette A; Wendland. Martin M; Maronde. Erik E
Key Findings
- Reverse pharmacology can identify natural peptide ligands for orphan GPCRs.
- Metastin (kisspeptin-10) regulates endocrine functions during pregnancy and gonadal development.
- QRFP modulates food intake and aldosterone secretion in rats.
- Chemerin functions as a chemoattractant for immune cells and may influence inflammation and bone development.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that kisspeptin-10 is linked to hormone regulation around reproduction, so it could be of interest for fertility or hormonal balance experiments. However, the abstract provides no dosing guidelines or direct performance benefits, so any use would be exploratory and should be approached with caution.
Summary
Scientists used a screening method to link three natural peptides—metastin (kisspeptin-10), QRFP, and chemerin—to their cell receptors and discovered what they do in the body. Metastin helps control hormones related to pregnancy and gonad development, QRFP influences how much we eat and hormone release from the adrenal gland, and chemerin acts as a signal for immune cells and may affect inflammation and bone growth.
Abstract
Reverse pharmacology is a screening technology that matches G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) with unknown cognate ligands in cell-based screening assays by detection of agonist-induced signaling pathways. One decade spent pursuing orphan GPCR screening by this technique assigned over 30 ligand/receptor pairs and revealed previously known or novel undescribed ligands, mostly of a peptidic nature. In this review, we describe the discovery, characterization of the structural composition, biological function, physiological role and therapeutic potential of three recently identified peptidic ligands. These are metastin, QRFP in a context of five RF-amide genes described in humans and the chemoattractant, chemerin. Metastin was initially characterized as a metastasis inhibitor. Investigations using ligand/receptor pairing revealed that metastin was involved in a variety of physiological processes, including endocrine function during pregnancy and gonad development. The novel RF-amide QRFP is implicated in food intake and aldosterone release from the adrenal cortex in the rat. Chemerin, first described as TIG2, is upregulated in tazarotene-treated psoriatic skin. By GPCR screening, bioactive chemerin was isolated from ovarial carcinoma fluid as well as hemofiltrate. Characterization as a chemoattractant for immature dendritic cells and analysis of the expression profile of metastin and its receptor suggested a physiological role of chemerin as a mediator of the immune response, inflammatory processes and bone development.
Study Information
pubmed
2005
2005-05-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.2174/1389203054065419
23