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Melanotan-I

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

Quick Stats
Studies 225
Trials 100
Score 1
2012 pubmed 10 citations

The melanocortin 4 receptor: oligomer formation, interaction sites and functional significance.

Chapman. Kathryn L KL; Findlay. John B C JB

Key Findings

  • MC4R can form dimers and higher‑order oligomers via a cysteine (C84) near the cell interior
  • When MC4R is not linked to its G‑protein, the shape of the dimer changes, suggesting activation alters the interface
  • The G‑protein appears to reduce the receptor’s affinity for the agonist, acting as a negative allosteric modulator
  • Mixed receptor pairs can rescue signaling, indicating cross‑talk between subunits

Practical Outcomes

  • For most users, this research doesn’t change dosing or protocols. It simply highlights that MC4R signaling is complex, which may explain variable responses to melanotan‑i, but no actionable steps are derived from these findings.

Summary

The study shows that the MC4R protein, which melanotan‑i targets, can stick together in pairs or larger groups, and that its connection to a G‑protein changes how these groups form and work. This is mostly basic science and doesn’t give direct advice on how to use the peptide.

Abstract

This study involves the structural and functional properties of the recombinant melanocortin 4 receptor (MC(4)R) expressed in the HEK-293 cell line. Using co-immuno-purification approaches, the receptor appears to be an oligomer, which can be crosslinked through disulphide bonds involving a native cysteine residue (84) to give a dimeric species. This position is located near the cytosolic region of transmembrane segment 2 and it is suggested that this is an interacting interface between MC(4)R monomers. Using co-expression of the native protein and a C84A mutant, it appears that the receptor also forms higher order oligomers via alternative interfaces. Interestingly, disulphide crosslink formation does not occur if the receptor is uncoupled from its G-protein, even though the oligomeric state is preserved. This suggests that the conformational changes, which occur on activation, affect the TM2 interface. The pharmacology of the agonist, NDP-MSH, indicates that the MC(4)R retains high affinity for the ligand in the absence of the G-protein but occupancy for the ligand is increased. The data can be interpreted to suggest that the G-protein exerts a negative allosteric effect on the receptor. Co-expression of one receptor lacking the ability to signal with another, which cannot bind the agonist, restored ligand-dependent activation of the G-protein to situations in which neither receptor on its own could activate the G-protein. Such transactivation suggests meaningful cross talk between the receptor subunits in the oligomeric complex. These studies demonstrate further unique features of the MC(4)R.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-10-23T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.bbamem.2012.10.011

Citations

10

References

48