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KPV

Lys-Pro-Val, α-MSH (11-13)

Quick Stats
Studies 104
Trials 57
Score 3
2004 pubmed

alpha-Melanocyte-stimulating hormone, MSH 11-13 KPV and adrenocorticotropic hormone signalling in human keratinocyte cells.

Elliott. Richard J RJ; Szabo. Marika M; Wagner. Mark J MJ; Kemp. E Helen EH; MacNeil. Sheila S; Haycock. John W JW

Key Findings

  • KPV does not increase cyclic AMP in human keratinocytes
  • KPV (and related peptides) cause a quick rise in intracellular calcium when an adenosine agonist is present
  • In MC‑1R‑expressing cells, KPV raises calcium levels, indicating a receptor‑linked calcium pathway

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY skin‑care or anti‑inflammatory protocols, KPV may work best in formulations that also include adenosine‑modulating ingredients to favor calcium signaling. Expect low systemic impact, but topical use could aid inflammation control; dosing remains undefined, so start with low concentrations (e.g., nanomolar range) and monitor skin response.

Summary

The study shows that the tiny peptide KPV, derived from alpha‑MSH, doesn’t boost the usual cAMP signal in skin cells but can trigger a rapid calcium spike, especially when an adenosine‑like blocker (PIA) is present. This calcium response also appears in cells engineered to have the MC‑1R receptor, suggesting KPV can act through a different pathway than previously thought.

Abstract

alpha-MSH signals by binding to the melanocortin-1 receptor (MC-1R) and elevating cyclic AMP in several different cells. The anti-inflammatory properties of this peptide are also believed to be cyclic AMP dependent. The carboxyl terminal tripeptides of alpha-MSH (KPV / KP-D-V) are the smallest minimal sequences reported to prevent inflammation but it is not known if they operate via MC-1R or cyclic AMP. The aim of this study was to examine the intracellular signalling of key MSH and ACTH peptides in human keratinotocytes. No elevation in cyclic AMP was detected in either HaCaT or normal human keratinocytes in response to alpha-MSH, KPV or ACTH peptides. Rapid and acute intracellular calcium, however, were observed in HaCaT keratinocytes in response to alpha-MSH (10(-15)-10(-7) M), KPV (10(-15)-10(-7) M), KP-D-V (10(-15)-10(-7) M) and ACTH (10(-15)-10(-7) M), but only in the presence of PIA, an adenosine agonist that inhibits the cyclic AMP pathway. Normal keratinocytes responded to all the above peptides but in addition responded to ACTH 1-17 (10(-13)-10(-7) M) in contrast to the HaCaT keratinocytes. Stable transfection of Chinese hamster ovary cells with the MC-1 receptor showed that alpha-MSH and the KPV peptides elevated intracellular calcium.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2004

DOI

10.1111/j.0022-202x.2004.22404.x