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Melanotan-I

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

Quick Stats
Studies 225
Trials 100
2003 pubmed 6 citations

Gain-of-function somatic cell lines for drug discovery applications generated by homologous recombination.

Zeh. Karin K; Sanders. Pamela P; Londo. Phillip P; Crute. James J JJ; Pollok. Brian A BA; Whitney. Michael A MA

Key Findings

  • Combined gene targeting with fluorescence-activated cell sorting to isolate gain‑of‑function cells
  • Inserted a constitutive promoter into the MC4R and PPARÎł genes, creating active receptor‑expressing lines
  • Engineered cells showed correct drug responses, proving they’re useful for high‑throughput screening

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY health enthusiasts, this study doesn’t offer an actionable protocol or dosage advice. It’s a technical advance that may eventually help develop new drugs, but it has no immediate relevance to personal biohacking practices.

Summary

Scientists created a new way to make cell lines that constantly produce certain receptors, using gene editing and cell sorting, so they can test drugs more efficiently. This technique is about lab research tools, not a direct health or performance tip you can use yourself.

Abstract

Gene targeting allows for precise genomic engineering and has been used extensively to generate both loss-of-function and gain-of-function models in mice. Similar manipulation of the genome of somatic cell lines holds high value in basic and applied research, but has been hampered by low recombination frequencies and the subsequent labor-intensive analysis of a large number of cell clones. By combining gene targeting methods with fluorescence-activated cell sorting, gain-of-function cell lines were generated and identified based on a functional readout. To demonstrate the general applicability of this approach to drug discovery, we generated targeted promoter insertion cell lines for two key drug target classes -- the G protein-coupled receptor melanocortin-receptor 4 and the nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma. Molecular analysis of the engineered cell clones confirmed the predicted integration of a constitutive promoter into an endogenous allele, and the appropriate pharmacology for these targets validated the use of these gain-of-function cell lines in drug discovery applications, including high-throughput compound screening.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2003

Date

2003-12-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1089/154065803772613390

Citations

6

References

38