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Melanotan-I

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

Quick Stats
Studies 225
Trials 100
Score 2
2014 pubmed 28 citations

Melanocortins protect against brain damage and counteract cognitive decline in a transgenic mouse model of moderate Alzheimer׳s disease.

Giuliani. Daniela D; Galantucci. Maria M; Neri. Laura L; Canalini. Fabrizio F; Calevro. Anita A; Bitto. Alessandra A; Ottani. Alessandra A; Vandini. Eleonora E; Sena. Paola P; Sandrini. Maurizio M; Squadrito. Francesco F; Zaffe. Davide D; Guarini. Salvatore S

Key Findings

  • Daily nanomolar doses of NDP‑α‑MSH reduced amyloid‑beta deposits and neuronal loss in the hippocampus and cortex of AD mice.
  • Mice treated with the peptide performed better on spatial learning and memory tests compared to saline‑treated controls.
  • Blocking MC4 receptors eliminated all the protective effects, indicating MC4‑receptor activation is essential for the benefits.

Practical Outcomes

  • While the results hint that melanotan‑I could have brain‑protective properties, the study is limited to mice and uses a specific synthetic analog at a precise dose. There is no human safety or efficacy data, so self‑administration is not advised. For biohackers, the takeaway is that melanocortin pathways are a research target for neuro‑protection, but more clinical work is needed before any practical protocol can be recommended.

Summary

In a mouse model of moderate Alzheimer's disease, giving a tiny daily dose of the melanocortin peptide NDP‑α‑MSH (a synthetic version of melanotan‑I) lowered brain amyloid buildup, protected neurons, and improved memory. The benefits disappeared when the MC4 receptor was blocked, showing the peptide works through that pathway.

Abstract

We previously reported that melanocortins induce neuroprotection in experimental acute and chronic neurodegenerative conditions, including Alzheimer׳s disease (AD) of mild severity. Here we investigated whether melanocortins afford neuroprotection and counteract cognitive decline in AD with a medium level of severity by using 24 week-old (at the start of the study) APPSwe transgenic mice (Tg2576). Saline-treated (days 1-50) control Tg2576 mice showed an impairment in spatial learning and memory, associated (at day 50, end of the study) with hippocampus at low levels of the synaptic activity-dependent gene Zif268, relevant brain changes such as cerebral cortex/hippocampus increased level of β-amyloid (Aβ) deposit, and neuronal loss, in comparison with wild-type animals. Treatment of Tg2576 mice (once daily at days 1-50) with a nanomolar dose of the melanocortin analog [Nle4,D-Phe7]α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (NDP-α-MSH) reduced cerebral cortex/hippocampus level of Aβ deposit, decreased neuronal loss, increased hippocampus Zif268 expression and improved cognitive functions, relative to saline-treated Tg2576 mice. Pharmacological blockade of melanocortin MC4 receptors with the MC4 receptor antagonist HS024 prevented all favorable effects of NDP-α-MSH. Our data indicate that MC4 receptor-stimulating melanocortins are able to counteract cognitive decline in experimental AD of medium severity through induction of neuroprotection and improvement of synaptic transmission. After further studies, these agents could gain a role as disease modifying therapeutics for AD.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-07-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ejphar.2014.06.063

Citations

28

References

66