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KPV

Lys-Pro-Val, α-MSH (11-13)

Quick Stats
Studies 104
Trials 57
Score 3
2008 pubmed 298 citations

Alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone and related tripeptides: biochemistry, antiinflammatory and protective effects in vitro and in vivo, and future perspectives for the treatment of immune-mediated inflammatory diseases.

Brzoska. Thomas T; Luger. Thomas A TA; Maaser. Christian C; Abels. Christoph C; Böhm. Markus M

Key Findings

  • Alpha‑MSH has potent anti‑inflammatory effects but also causes skin pigmentation.
  • The C‑terminal tripeptide KPV retains anti‑inflammatory activity without the pigment side‑effect.
  • KPV and a related tripeptide KdPT are inexpensive to produce and effective in various animal models of inflammatory disease.

Practical Outcomes

  • KPV could become a low‑cost, non‑pigmenting anti‑inflammatory supplement for biohackers interested in managing chronic inflammation. However, because human dosing and safety haven’t been established, start with very low amounts, track biomarkers, and await clinical trial data before wide use.

Summary

Alpha‑MSH is a natural hormone that strongly reduces inflammation but also darkens skin. Scientists have found that a tiny piece of it, the three‑amino‑acid fragment called KPV, keeps the anti‑inflammatory power without causing any pigment change. Because KPV is cheap to make and works in many animal inflammation models, it looks promising for conditions like skin or gut inflammation, lung issues, eye irritation, and arthritis, though human data are still missing.

Abstract

Alpha-MSH is a tridecapeptide derived from proopiomelanocortin. Many studies over the last few years have provided evidence that alpha-MSH has potent protective and antiinflammatory effects. These effects can be elicited via centrally expressed melanocortin receptors that orchestrate descending neurogenic antiinflammatory pathways. alpha-MSH can also exert antiinflammatory and protective effects on cells of the immune system and on peripheral nonimmune cell types expressing melanocortin receptors. At the molecular level, alpha-MSH affects various pathways implicated in regulation of inflammation and protection, i.e., nuclear factor-kappaB activation, expression of adhesion molecules and chemokine receptors, production of proinflammatory cytokines and mediators, IL-10 synthesis, T cell proliferation and activity, inflammatory cell migration, expression of antioxidative enzymes, and apoptosis. The antiinflammatory effects of alpha-MSH have been validated in animal models of experimentally induced fever; irritant and allergic contact dermatitis, vasculitis, and fibrosis; ocular, gastrointestinal, brain, and allergic airway inflammation; and arthritis, but also in models of organ injury. One obstacle limiting the use of alpha-MSH in inflammatory disorders is its pigmentary effect. Due to its preserved antiinflammatory effect but lack of pigmentary action, the C-terminal tripeptide of alpha-MSH, KPV, has been delineated as an alternative for antiinflammatory therapy. KdPT, a derivative of KPV corresponding to amino acids 193-195 of IL-1beta, is also emerging as a tripeptide with antiinflammatory effects. The physiochemical properties and expected low costs of production render both agents suitable for the future treatment of immune-mediated inflammatory skin and bowel disease, fibrosis, allergic and inflammatory lung disease, ocular inflammation, and arthritis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

Date

2008-07-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1210/er.2007-0027

Citations

298

References

194