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 1
2005 pubmed

Co-operative regulation of ligand binding to melanocortin receptor subtypes: evidence for interacting binding sites.

Kopanchuk. Sergei S; Veiksina. Santa S; Petrovska. Ramona R; Mutule. Ilze I; Szardenings. Michael M; Rinken. Ago A; Wikberg. Jarl E S JE

Key Findings

  • Calcium is essential for specific binding of the peptide to melanocortin receptors
  • Binding and dissociation of the peptide are not uniform; dissociation shows multiple phases
  • Different MSH‑like peptides show varied competition curves, indicating cooperative and heterogeneous binding

Practical Outcomes

  • For most DIY users, the findings don’t change how you would take melanotan‑I. It mainly tells researchers that the receptor interactions are complex, which could explain why individual responses vary, but it doesn’t provide new dosing or safety guidance.

Summary

This study looked at how a lab‑made version of the hormone that affects skin pigment (a melanocortin peptide) sticks to different receptor types in cell membranes. It found that calcium is needed for the peptide to bind, that the binding and unbinding behave in a complicated way, and that different related peptides compete for the same spots in unpredictable patterns.

Abstract

This study evaluates the binding the melanocyte stimulating hormone peptide analogue [125I]NDP-MSH to melanocortin receptors MC1, MC3, MC4 and MC5 in insect cell membranes produced by baculovirus expression systems. The presence of Ca2+ was found to be mandatory to achieve specific [125I]NDP-MSH binding to the melanocortin receptors. Although association kinetics of [125I]NDP-MSH followed the regularities of simple bimolecular reactions, the dissociation of [125I]NDP-MSH from the melanocortin receptors was heterogeneous. Eleven linear and cyclic MSH peptides studied displaced the [125I]NDP-MSH binding to the studied melanocortin receptors, with the shapes of their competition curves varying from biphasic or shallow to super-steep (Hill coefficients ranging from 0.4 to 1.5). Notably the same peptide often gave highly different patterns on different melanocortin receptor subtypes; e.g. the MC4 receptor selective antagonist HS131 gave a Hill coefficient of 1.5 on the MC1 receptor but 0.5-0.7 on the MC(3-5) receptors. Adding a mask of one of the peptides to block its high affinity binding did not prevent other competing peptides to yield biphasic competition curves. The data indicate that the binding of MSH peptides to melanocortin receptors are governed by a complex dynamic homotropic co-operative regulations.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

Date

2005-04-11T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ejphar.2005.02.021