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Melanotan-I

Afamelanotide, MT-I, [Nle4-D-Phe7]-α-MSH, Scenesse, CUV-1647

Quick Stats
Studies 225
Trials 100
Score 2
2008 pubmed 72 citations

Vagus nerve mediates the protective effects of melanocortins against cerebral and systemic damage after ischemic stroke.

Ottani. Alessandra A; Giuliani. Daniela D; Mioni. Chiara C; Galantucci. Maria M; Minutoli. Letteria L; Bitto. Alessandra A; Altavilla. Domenica D; Zaffe. Davide D; Botticelli. Annibale R AR; Squadrito. Francesco F; Guarini. Salvatore S

Key Findings

  • Stroke activates inflammatory and apoptotic pathways in brain and liver within 10‑20 hours.
  • NDP‑alpha‑MSH (a melanocortin analog) given 3‑9 h after stroke suppresses these harmful pathways.
  • The protective effect requires an intact vagus nerve and peripheral nicotinic acetylcholine receptors.

Practical Outcomes

  • This study suggests melanocortin analogs might help protect the brain after a stroke, but it’s an early animal experiment and not ready for human use. For biohackers, focusing on ways to boost vagal tone (e.g., breathing exercises, cold exposure) could be a more immediate, indirect way to support similar protective pathways. No dosage or safety guidance for melanotan‑I in this context is available yet.

Summary

In rats, a stroke triggers harmful inflammation and cell death not only in the brain but also in the liver. Giving a synthetic melanin‑stimulating hormone (similar to melanotan‑I) a few hours after the stroke cuts down this inflammation and protects cells, but only if the vagus nerve’s cholinergic (acetylcholine) pathway is intact. Cutting the vagus nerve or blocking its receptors removes the benefit, showing the nerve is key to the protection.

Abstract

A vagus nerve-mediated, efferent cholinergic protective pathway activated by melanocortins is operative in circulatory shock and myocardial ischemia. Moreover, melanocortins have neuroprotective effects against brain damage after ischemic stroke. Here we investigated cerebral and systemic pathophysiologic reactions to focal cerebral ischemia in rats induced by intrastriatal microinjection of endothelin-1, and the possible protective role of the melanocortin-activated vagal cholinergic pathway. In the striatum and liver of saline-treated control rats, the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases, c-jun N-terminal kinases, and caspase-3, the increase in tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) concentration and DNA fragmentation, as well as the increase in TNF-alpha plasma levels, occurred 10 and 20 h after the ischemic insult suggesting an activation of inflammatory and apoptotic responses. Treatment with [Nle(4), D-Phe(7)]alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (NDP-alpha-MSH; 3 or 9 h after stroke) suppressed the inflammatory and apoptotic cascades at central and peripheral level. Bilateral vagotomy and pharmacologic blockade of peripheral nicotinic acetylcholine receptors blunted the protective effect of NDP-alpha-MSH. The present results show that focal brain ischemia in rats causes significant effects not only in the brain, but also in the liver. Moreover, our data support the hypothesis that a protective, melanocortin-activated, vagal cholinergic pathway is likely operative in conditions of ischemic stroke.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

Date

2008-11-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/jcbfm.2008.140

Citations

72

References

42