Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Melanotan-I

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

Quick Stats
Studies 225
Trials 100
Score 2
2015 pubmed 20 citations

α-Melanocyte-stimulating-hormone (α-MSH) modulates human chondrocyte activation induced by proinflammatory cytokines.

Capsoni. Franco F; Ongari. Anna Maria AM; Lonati. Caterina C; Accetta. Riccardo R; Gatti. Stefano S; Catania. Anna A

Key Findings

  • α‑MSH lowered MMP‑3 gene expression and protein release in cytokine‑stimulated chondrocytes
  • α‑MSH increased TIMP‑3 gene expression and secretion in resting cells
  • α‑MSH reduced iNOS gene expression but did not reduce nitric oxide production

Practical Outcomes

  • The peptide may have modest joint‑protective, anti‑inflammatory properties, but the data are from isolated cells, not whole‑body studies, and no dosing guidance is provided. Biohackers should view this as early‑stage evidence rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol for longevity or performance.

Summary

The study shows that alpha‑melanocyte‑stimulating hormone (the same peptide behind melanotan‑I) can calm down some inflammation signals in cartilage cells taken from osteoarthritis patients, especially by lowering certain enzymes that break down joint tissue and boosting a natural inhibitor, but it doesn’t stop all inflammatory molecules and the effects differ depending on the trigger used.

Abstract

Alpha-melanocyte-stimulating-hormone (α-MSH) has marked anti-inflammatory potential. Proinflammatory cytokines are critical mediators of the disturbed cartilage homeostasis in osteoarthritis, inhibiting anabolic activities and increasing catabolic activities in chondrocytes. Since human chondrocytes express α-MSH receptors, we evaluated the role of the peptide in modulating chondrocyte production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), tissue inhibitors of MMPs (TIMPs), inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and nitric oxide (NO) in response to interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α). Human articular chondrocytes were obtained from osteoarthritic joint cartilage from subjects undergoing hip routine arthroplasty procedures. The cells were cultured with or without α-MSH in the presence of IL-1β or TNF-α. Cell-free supernatants were collected and cells immediately lysed for RNA purification. Expression of cytokines, MMPs, TIMPs, iNOS was determined by Reverse Transcription Real-time Polymerase Chain Reaction and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Griess reaction was used for NO quantification. Gene expression and secretion of IL-6, IL-8, MMP-3, MMP-13 were significantly increased in IL-1β or TNF-α-stimulated chondrocytes; α-MSH did not modify the release of IL-6 or IL-8 while the peptide significantly reduced their gene expression on TNF-α-stimulated cells. A significant inhibition of MMP3 gene expression and secretion from IL-1β or TNFα-stimulated chondrocytes was induced by α-MSH. On the other hand, α-MSH did not modify the release of MMP-13 by cytokine-stimulated chondrocyte but significantly decreased gene expression of the molecule on TNF-α-stimulated cells. Detectable amount of TIMP-3 and TIMP-4 were present in the supernatants of resting chondrocytes and a significant increase of TIMP-3 gene expression and release was induced by α-MSH on unstimulated cells. TIMP-3 secretion and gene expression were significantly increased in IL-1β-stimulated chondrocytes and α-MSH down-regulated gene expression but not secretion of the molecule. TIMP-4 gene expression (but not secretion) was moderately induced in IL-1β-stimulated chondrocytes with a down-regulation exerted by α-MSH. IL-1β and TNF-α were potent stimuli for NO production and iNOS gene expression by chondrocytes; no inhibition was induced by α-MSH on cytokine-stimulated NO production, while the peptide significantly reduced gene expression of iNOS. Our results underscore a potential anti-inflammatory and chondroprotective activity exerted by α-MSH, increasing TIMP-3 gene expression and release on resting cells and down- modulating TNF-α-induced activation of human chondrocytes. However, the discrepancy between the influences exerted by α-MSH on gene expression and protein release as well as the difference in the inhibitory pattern exerted by α-MSH in TNF-α- or IL-1β-stimulated cells leave some uncertainty on the role of the peptide on chondrocyte modulation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2015

Date

2015-06-21T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1186/s12891-015-0615-1

Citations

20

References

19