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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
1997 pubmed

Phenotypic characterization and functional correlation of alpha-MSH binding to pituitary cells.

Zheng. T T; Villalobos. C C; Nusser. K D KD; Gettys. T W TW; Faught. W J WJ; Castaño. J P JP; Frawley. L S LS

Key Findings

  • Alpha‑MSH binds specifically to mammotrope cells in the pituitary
  • Those cells have functional receptors that trigger calcium signaling when activated
  • Alpha‑MSH does not compete with dopamine at the same receptor site

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this suggests melanotan‑I could influence prolactin release via a distinct pituitary pathway, but the findings are from rats and don’t directly translate into dosing or performance advice for people. It’s a modest piece of mechanistic info rather than a new protocol, so use it as background knowledge rather than a guide for supplementation.

Summary

The study shows that the hormone alpha‑MSH (the natural version of melanotan‑I) sticks to a specific type of pituitary cell that makes prolactin, and it triggers a calcium signal inside those cells. It doesn’t share the same binding spot as dopamine. This was seen in lactating rats, not humans.

Abstract

It is clear that alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH), released by the hypophysial neurointermediate lobe, is a mediator of suckling-induced prolactin release, but several questions surrounding its role remain unresolved. Accordingly, the objectives of the present study were 1) to establish whether alpha-MSH could bind in a reversible manner to a specific secretory type cell within the adenohypophysis (AP), 2) to resolve the issue of whether the peptide could compete with dopamine for the same receptor binding site, and 3) to seek a functional signaling correlate for alpha-MSH binding. In pursuit of these objectives, we subjected pituitary cells from lactating rats to alpha-MSH receptor autoradiography, AP hormone immunocytochemistry, or digital imaging fluorescence microscopy with fura 2 as a calcium-sensitive probe. Our results show that alpha-MSH binding is restricted to mammotropes and that a specific subpopulation of these express functional alpha-MSH receptors that are coupled to a Ca2+ signaling pathway. Moreover, alpha-MSH does not compete with dopamine antagonists/agonists for the same binding site.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1997

DOI

10.1152/ajpendo.1997.272.2.e282