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KPV

Lys-Pro-Val, α-MSH (11-13)

Quick Stats
Studies 104
Trials 57
Score 2
2010 pubmed 30 citations

Terminal signal: anti-inflammatory effects of α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone related peptides beyond the pharmacophore.

Brzoska. Thomas T; Böhm. Markus M; Lügering. Andreas A; Loser. Karin K; Luger. Thomas A TA

Key Findings

  • α‑MSH is a strong anti‑inflammatory hormone but also causes skin pigment changes
  • KPV keeps most of α‑MSH’s anti‑inflammatory power while lacking pigment effects
  • Related tripeptide KdPT also shows strong anti‑inflammatory activity and may have good drug‑like properties

Practical Outcomes

  • KPV could become a low‑cost, oral or topical anti‑inflammatory supplement for conditions like skin irritation, gut inflammation, asthma or arthritis, but human dosing, safety and efficacy data are still missing, so cautious experimentation is advised.

Summary

The short peptide KPV, taken from the end of the hormone α‑MSH, can reduce inflammation in animal studies without causing skin‑pigment changes, making it a potentially safer anti‑inflammatory option than the full hormone.

Abstract

During the last two decades a significant number of investigations has established the fact that α-Melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH) is a potent anti-inflammatory mediator. The anti-inflammatory effects of α-MSH can be elicited via melanocortin receptors (MC-Rs) broadly expressed in a number of tissues ranging from the central nervous system to cells of the immune system and on resident somatic cells of peripheral tissues. α-MSH affects various pathways regulating inflammatory responses such as NF-κB activation, expression of adhesion molecules, inflammatory cytokines, chemokine receptors, T-cell proliferation and activity and inflammatory cell migration. In vivo α-MSH has been shown to be anti-inflammatory as well in animal models of fever, irritant and allergic contact dermatitis, cutaneous vasculitis, fibrosis, in ocular, gastrointestinal, brain and allergic airway inflammation and arthritis. A broad range of effects of α-MSH exerted beyond the field of inflammation, its pigmentory capacity being only the most visible aspect, has been one of the major impediments limiting the use of α-MSH in human inflammatory disorders. Interestingly KPV, C-terminal tripeptide of α-MSH, which lacks the entire sequence motif required for binding to any of the known MC-Rs, retains almost all of the anti-inflammatory capacity of the full hormone, but in its activities display a lack of any pigmentory action. While the exact signaling mechanism utilized by KPV and related peptides currently is unknown it has been demonstrated already that significant similarities between anti-inflammatory signaling of α-MSH and those short peptides exist. These α-MSH related tripeptides thus may be useful alternatives for anti-inflammatory peptide therapy. KdPT, a derivative of KPV corresponding to IL-1β(193-195), currently is emerging as another tripeptide with potent anti-inflammatory effects. A more limited spectrum of biologic activities, potentially advantageous physicochemical, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties as well as the expectation of low costs for pharmaceutical production make these agents interesting candidates for the treatment of immune-mediated inflammatory skin and bowel diseases, allergic asthma and arthritis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

DOI

10.1007/978-1-4419-6354-3_8

Citations

30

References

65