NDP-MSH treatment recovers marginal lungs during ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP).
Lonati. Caterina C; Battistin. Michele M; Dondossola. Daniele E DE; Bassani. Giulia A GA; Brambilla. Daniela D; Merighi. Riccardo R; Leonardi. Patrizia P; Carlin. Andrea A; Meroni. Marica M; Zanella. Alberto A; Catania. Anna A; Gatti. Stefano S
Key Findings
- NDP‑MSH cut inflammatory mediator release and leukocyte numbers in lung perfusate
- It lowered lactate production and raised ATP levels in injured lungs
- It markedly improved vascular resistance, airway compliance, and oxygenation in lungs from cardiac‑death donors
Practical Outcomes
- The data suggest melanocortin peptides like NDP‑MSH can protect lung tissue by dampening inflammation and supporting energy metabolism, but the work is limited to an ex‑vivo rat model of organ transplantation. For biohackers, it hints at possible anti‑inflammatory benefits, yet no human dosing, safety, or delivery method is known, so it isn’t ready for personal use.
Summary
In a rat study, giving the synthetic peptide NDP‑MSH (a melanocortin) during the process of preserving lungs outside the body reduced inflammation, lowered waste lactate, boosted cellular energy (ATP), and improved how well the lungs worked, especially after injury. These effects were seen in both ischemia/reperfusion and cardiac‑death models, and the lungs showed the receptors needed for the peptide to act.
Abstract
The increasing use of marginal lungs for transplantation encourages novel approaches to improve graft quality. Melanocortins and their receptors (MCRs) exert multiple beneficial effects in pulmonary inflammation. We tested the idea that treatment with the synthetic α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone analogue [Nle4,D-Phe7]-α-MSH (NDP-MSH) during ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) could exert positive influences in lungs exposed to different injuries. Rats were assigned to one of the following protocols (N = 10 each): 1) ischemia/reperfusion (IR) or 2) cardiac death (CD) followed by ex vivo perfusion. NDP-MSH treatment was performed in five rats of each protocol before lung procurement and during EVLP. Pulmonary function and perfusate concentration of gases, electrolytes, metabolites, nitric-oxide, mediators, and cells were assessed throughout EVLP. ATP content and specific MCR expression were investigated in perfused lungs and in biopsies collected from rats in resting conditions (Native, N = 5). NDP-MSH reduced the release of inflammatory mediators in perfusates of both the IR and the CD groups. Treatment was likewise associated with a lesser amount of leukocytes (IR: p = 0.034; CD: p = 0.002) and reduced lactate production (IR: p = 0.010; CD: p = 0.008). In lungs exposed to IR injury, the NDP-MSH group showed increased ATP content (p = 0.040) compared to controls. In CD lungs, a significant improvement of vascular (p = 0.002) and airway (Ppeak: p < 0.001, compliance: p < 0.050, pO2: p < 0.001) parameters was observed. Finally, the expression of MC1R and MC5R was detected in both native and ex vivo-perfused lungs. The results indicate that NDP-MSH administration preserves lung function through broad positive effects on multiple pathways and suggest that exploitation of the melanocortin system during EVLP could improve reconditioning of marginal lungs before transplantation.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-04-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.peptides.2021.170552
13
67