PepT1-mediated tripeptide KPV uptake reduces intestinal inflammation.
Dalmasso. Guillaume G; Charrier-Hisamuddin. Laetitia L; Nguyen. Hang Thi Thu HT; Yan. Yutao Y; Sitaraman. Shanthi S; Merlin. Didier D
Key Findings
- KPV blocks NF‑kappaB and MAP‑kinase inflammatory pathways at nanomolar concentrations in intestinal and T cells
- KPV is taken up into cells via the PepT1 peptide transporter present in gut and immune cells
- Oral KPV reduced inflammation and disease severity in mouse models of colitis (DSS and TNBS)
Practical Outcomes
- KPV shows promise as an oral anti‑inflammatory peptide for gut health, but because human dosing, safety, and efficacy are untested, biohackers should treat it as experimental and await further research before regular use.
Summary
A tiny protein piece called KPV (Lys‑Pro‑Val) can get inside gut and immune cells through a transporter named PepT1 and, at very low doses, blocks inflammation signals. In mice, drinking water with KPV lowered gut inflammation in two common colitis models, suggesting it might help with gut health, but no human trials exist yet.
Abstract
KPV is a tripeptide (Lys-Pro-Val), which possesses anti-inflammatory properties; however, its mechanisms of action still remain unknown. PepT1 is a di/tripeptide transporter normally expressed in the small intestine and induced in colon during inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The aim of this study was to 1) investigate whether the KPV anti-inflammatory effect is PepT1-mediated in intestinal epithelian and immune cells, and 2) examine the anti-inflammatory effects in two models of mice colitis. Human intestinal epithelial cells Caco2-BBE, HT29-Cl.19A, and human T cells (Jurkat) were stimulated with pro-inflammatory cytokines in the present or absence of KPV. KPV anti-inflammatory effect was assessed using a NF-kappaB luciferase gene reporter, Western blot, real-time RT-PCR and ELISA. Uptake experiments were performed using cold KPV as a competitor for PepT1 radiolabelled substrate or using [(3)H]KPV to determine kinetic characteristics of KPV uptake. Anti-inflammatory effect of KPV was also investigated in DSS- and TNBS-induced colitis in mice. KPV was added to drinking water and inflammation was assessed at the histologic level and by proinflammatory cytokine mRNA expression. Nanomolar concentrations of KPV inhibit the activation of NF-kappaB and MAP kinase inflammatory signaling pathways, and reduce pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion. We found that KPV acts via PepT1 expressed in immune and intestinal epithelial cells. Furthermore, oral administration of KPV reduces the incidence of DSS- and TNBS-induced colitis indicated by a decrease in pro-inflammatory cytokine expression. This study indicates tht KPV is transported into cells by PepT1 and might be a new therapeutic agent for IBD.
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-10-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.1053/j.gastro.2007.10.026