Novel anti-inflammatory and chondroprotective effects of the human melanocortin MC1 receptor agonist BMS-470539 dihydrochloride and human melanocortin MC3 receptor agonist PG-990 on lipopolysaccharide activated chondrocytes.
Can. Vedia C VC; Locke. Ian C IC; Kaneva. Magdalena K MK; Kerrigan. Mark J P MJP; Merlino. Francesco F; De Pascale. Clara C; Grieco. Paolo P; Getting. Stephen J SJ
Key Findings
- Human cartilage cells have MC1 and MC3 receptors that respond to melanocortin peptides
- Activating these receptors with BMS-470539 (MC1) or PG‑990/[DTrp8]-γ‑MSH (MC3) cuts LPS‑induced cell death and lowers inflammatory markers IL‑6, IL‑8, MMP‑1,‑3,‑13
- Stimulation also raises the anti‑inflammatory protein HO‑1, showing a protective effect
Practical Outcomes
- The findings suggest melanocortin‑based peptides could one day be used to protect joints from inflammation, but current evidence is limited to cell cultures. Until human trials are done, there’s no clear protocol, dosage, or safety data for self‑use. Keep an eye on future research before considering any supplementation.
Summary
A lab study showed that activating certain skin‑related receptors (MC1 and MC3) on cartilage cells with specific peptide drugs reduces inflammation and cell death caused by bacterial toxins, and boosts a protective protein. The work was done in petri dishes, not people, so it’s an early hint that similar peptides (like the short KPV fragment) might help joint health, but there’s no dosage or safety info for human use yet.
Abstract
Human melanocortin MC1 and MC3 receptors expressed on C-20/A4 chondrocytes exhibit chondroprotective and anti-inflammatory effects when activated by melanocortin peptides. Nearly 9 million people in the UK suffer from osteoarthritis, and bacterial infections play a role in its development. Here, we evaluate the effect of a panel of melanocortin peptides with different selectivity for human melanocortin MC1 (α-MSH, BMS-470539 dihydrochloride) and MC3 ([DTrp<sup>8</sup>]-γ-MSH, PG-990) receptors and C-terminal peptide α-MSH<sub>11-13</sub>(KPV), on inhibiting LPS-induced chondrocyte death, pro-inflammatory mediators and induction of anti-inflammatory proteins. C-20/A4 chondrocytes were treated with a panel of melanocortin peptides prophylactically and therapeutically in presence of LPS (0.1 μg/ml). The chondroprotective properties of these peptides determined by cell viability assay, RT-PCR, ELISA for detection of changes in inflammatory markers (IL-6, IL-8 and MMP-1, -3 and -13) and western blotting for expression of the anti-inflammatory protein heme-oxygenase-1. C-20/A4 expressed human melanocortin MC1 and MC3 receptors and melanocortin peptides elevated cAMP. LPS stimulation caused a reduction in C-20/A4 viability, attenuated by the human melanocortin MC1 receptor agonist BMS-470539 dihydrochloride, and MC3 receptor agonists PG-990 and [DTrp<sup>8</sup>]-γ-MSH. Prophylactic and therapeutic regimes of [DTrp<sup>8</sup>]-γ-MSH significantly inhibited LPS-induced modulation of cartilage-damaging IL-6, IL-8, MMPs -1,-3 and -13 mediators both prophylactically and therapeutically, whilst human melanocortin MC1 and MC3 receptor agonists promoted an increase in HO-1 production. In the presence of LPS, activation of human melanocortin MC1 and MC3 receptors provided potent chondroprotection, upregulation of anti-inflammatory proteins and downregulation of inflammatory and proteolytic mediators involved in cartilage degradation, suggesting a new avenue for osteoarthritis treatment.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-01-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.ejphar.2020.172971
12
48