Selective melanocortin MC4 receptor agonists reverse haemorrhagic shock and prevent multiple organ damage.
Giuliani. D D; Mioni. C C; Bazzani. C C; Zaffe. D D; Botticelli. A R AR; Capolongo. S S; Sabba. A A; Galantucci. M M; Iannone. A A; Grieco. P P; Novellino. E E; Colombo. G G; Tomasi. A A; Catania. A A; Guarini. S S
Key Findings
- MC4‑selective agonists restored cardiovascular and respiratory function after severe hemorrhage in rats
- Survival rates improved and free‑radical levels dropped with MC4 agonist treatment
- Organ damage in heart, lung, liver, and kidney was reduced, and effects were blocked by an MC4 antagonist
Practical Outcomes
- These results suggest MC4 receptor activation could be a powerful way to treat severe blood loss and prevent organ failure, but the studies were done in anesthetized rats with IV doses that are not yet known to be safe or effective in humans. For now, it’s a promising research direction rather than a usable protocol for self‑experimenters.
Summary
In rats that lost a lot of blood, drugs that specifically activate the MC4 receptor helped bring heart and breathing back to normal, cut harmful free radicals, and kept organs from damage, leading to better survival. The benefits disappeared when another drug blocked the MC4 receptor, showing the effect is truly due to MC4 activation.
Abstract
In circulatory shock, melanocortins have life-saving effects likely to be mediated by MC4 receptors. To gain direct insight into the role of melanocortin MC4 receptors in haemorrhagic shock, we investigated the effects of two novel selective MC4 receptor agonists. Severe haemorrhagic shock was produced in rats under general anaesthesia. Rats were then treated with either the non-selective agonist [Nle4, D-Phe7]-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (NDP--MSH) or with the selective MC4 agonists RO27-3225 and PG-931. Cardiovascular and respiratory functions were continuously monitored for 2 h; survival rate was recorded up to 24 h. Free radicals in blood were measured using electron spin resonance spectrometry; tissue damage was evaluated histologically 25 min or 24 h after treatment. All shocked rats treated with saline died within 30-35 min. Treatment with NDP--MSH, RO27-3225 and PG-931 produced a dose-dependent (13-108 nmol kg-1 i.v.) restoration of cardiovascular and respiratory functions, and improved survival. The three melanocortin agonists also markedly reduced circulating free radicals relative to saline-treated shocked rats. All these effects were prevented by i.p. pretreatment with the selective MC4 receptor antagonist HS024. Moreover, treatment with RO27-3225 prevented morphological and immunocytochemical changes in heart, lung, liver, and kidney, at both early (25 min) and late (24 h) intervals. Stimulation of MC4 receptors reversed haemorrhagic shock, reduced multiple organ damage and improved survival. Our findings suggest that selective MC4 receptor agonists could have a protective role against multiple organ failure following circulatory shock.
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-01-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/sj.bjp.0707115
47
66