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KPV

Lys-Pro-Val, α-MSH (11-13)

Quick Stats
Studies 104
Trials 57
2017 pubmed 30 citations

Peptide Receptor-Targeted Fluorescent Probe: Visualization and Discrimination between Chronic and Acute Ulcerative Colitis.

Zeng. Meiying M; Shao. Andong A; Li. Hui H; Tang. Yan Y; Li. Qiang Q; Guo. Zhiqian Z; Wu. Chungen C; Cheng. Yingsheng Y; Tian. He H; Zhu. Wei-Hong WH

Key Findings

  • PepT1 is over‑expressed in chronic ulcerative colitis cells
  • KPV‑linked fluorescent probe (DCM‑KPV) specifically lights up those cells
  • The probe can non‑invasively differentiate chronic, acute, and normal colon tissue

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research doesn’t provide a new supplement or protocol. It’s mainly a lab‑based imaging method that could eventually improve medical diagnosis, but there’s no direct action you can take now.

Summary

Scientists made a glowing molecule that sticks to a gut protein called PepT1, which is higher in chronic ulcerative colitis. By attaching the small peptide KPV to the glow‑stick, they can see inflamed areas in the colon without surgery and tell chronic from acute disease, but this is a diagnostic tool, not a treatment you can use yourself.

Abstract

The inflammatory activity of ulcerative colitis plays an important role in the medical treatment. However, accurate and real-time monitoring of the colitis activity with noninvasive bioimaging method is still challenging, especially in distinguishing between chronic and acute colitis. As a good receptor, the oligopeptide transporter (PepT1) is overexpressed in the colonic epithelial cells of chronic ulcerative colitis, which can deliver tripeptide KPV (Lys-Pro-Val, the C-terminal sequence of α-MSH) into cytosol in the intestine. Herein, we report a PepT1 peptide receptor-targeted fluorescent probe, dicyanomethylene-4H-pyran (DCM)-KPV, with the strategy of conjugating the KPV into the DCM chromophore. The diagnostic fluorescent probe bestows a specific receptor-targeted interaction with PepT1 through the KPV moiety, possessing several beneficial characteristics, such as efficient long emission, low photobleaching, negligible cytotoxicity, and high cytocompatibility in living cells. We build the overexpressed PepT1 on the cytomembrane of ulcerative colitis model Caco-2 cell as the efficient receptor to accumulate the targeted tripeptide KPV in the cytoplasm and nucleus. With the co-localization of DCM-KPV and the DNA-specific fluorophore, DAPI, the specifically long emission from chromophore DCM and efficient receptor-targeted peptide KPV, the fluorescent probe of DCM-KPV makes a breakthrough to the direct noninvasive observation of the accumulation in colon inflammation regions via intestinal mucosa, even successfully distinguishing the chronic, acute ulcerative colitis and normal groups. Compared with the traditional unenhanced magnetic resonance imaging and hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining, we make full use of exploiting the specific target-receptor interaction between the tripeptide unit, KPV, and the oligopeptide transporter, PepT1, for sensing selectivity. The desirable diagnostic ability of DCM-KPV can guarantee the real-time tracking and visualization of the role of intracellular KPV on ulcerative colitis, which provides an alternative to replace the time-consuming and tissue sampling-invasive H&E staining diagnosis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-04-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1021/acsami.7b00936

Citations

30

References

49