alpha-MSH related peptides: a new class of anti-inflammatory and immunomodulating drugs.
Luger. Thomas A TA; Brzoska. Thomas T
Key Findings
- KPV, the C‑terminal tripeptide of alpha‑MSH, shows strong anti‑inflammatory activity in animal models
- The peptide works by dampening NF‑kappaB, cytokine production, and immune cell migration
- A related tripeptide K(D)PT also displays potent anti‑inflammatory effects, expanding the potential drug class
Practical Outcomes
- These peptides could become topical or oral anti‑inflammatory agents for skin, eye, gut, asthma, or arthritis, but you’ll need to wait for human safety and dosage data before trying them. For now, the main takeaway is that KPV is a promising anti‑inflammatory lead, not a ready‑to‑use supplement.
Summary
Alpha‑MSH’s short fragment KPV (and a similar piece called K(D)PT) can calm inflammation in many animal tests, from skin rashes to asthma and arthritis. The research shows these tiny peptides work by blocking key immune signals, but no human trials or dosing guidelines exist yet.
Abstract
alpha-Melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) is a tridecapeptide derived from the proopiomelanocortin by post-translational processing. In addition to its effects on melanocytes, alpha-MSH has potent anti-inflammatory effects when administered systemically or locally. The anti-inflammatory effects of alpha-MSH are mediated by direct effects on cells of the immune system as well as indirectly by affecting the function of resident non-immune cells. alpha-MSH affects several pathways implicated in regulation of inflammatory responses such as NF-kappaB activation, expression of adhesion molecules and chemokine receptors, production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and other mediators. Thus alpha-MSH may modulate inflammatory cell proliferation, activity and migration. The anti-inflammatory effects of alpha-MSH have been confirmed by means of animal models of inflammation such as irritant and allergic contact dermatitis, cutaneous vasculitis, asthma, inflammatory bowel disease, rheumatoid arthritis, ocular and brain inflammation. Most of the anti-inflammatory activities of alpha-MSH can be attributed to its C-terminal tripeptide KPV. K(D)PT, a derivative of KPV corresponding to the amino acid 193-195 of IL-1beta, is currently emerging as another tripeptide with potent anti-inflammatory effects. The anti-inflammatory potential together with the favourable physiochemical properties most likely will allow these agents to be developed for the treatment of inflammatory skin, eye and bowel diseases, allergic asthma and arthritis.
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-10-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1136/ard.2007.079780
62
47