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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
2013 pubmed 50 citations

Up-regulation of the canonical Wnt-3A and Sonic hedgehog signaling underlies melanocortin-induced neurogenesis after cerebral ischemia.

Spaccapelo. Luca L; Galantucci. Maria M; Neri. Laura L; Contri. Miranda M; Pizzala. Roberto R; D'Amico. Roberto R; Ottani. Alessandra A; Sandrini. Maurizio M; Zaffe. Davide D; Giuliani. Daniela D; Guarini. Salvatore S

Key Findings

  • Melanotan‑I activated MC4 receptors and boosted Wnt‑3A/β‑catenin and Sonic hedgehog signaling in the hippocampus after ischemia.
  • This activation increased markers of new neuron formation (doublecortin) and reduced brain cell loss, leading to better learning and memory in the animal model.
  • Pharmacological inhibition of the Wnt, Shh, or MC4 pathways blocked all the protective and regenerative effects.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study suggests melanotan‑I could have neuroprotective and neuro‑regenerative properties, but it was only tested in a brain‑injury animal model with high‑dose injections. For biohackers, there is no clear dosing protocol, safety data, or evidence that the same benefits occur in healthy humans, so it remains a speculative avenue rather than an actionable supplement regimen.

Summary

In a rat-like brain injury model, giving the peptide melanotan‑I (a synthetic version of the hormone α‑MSH) helped brain cells grow back and improved memory. It worked by turning on two important cell‑growth pathways (Wnt‑3A/β‑catenin and Sonic hedgehog) and raising helpful proteins like IL‑10. Blocking those pathways stopped the benefits, showing they are essential for the effect.

Abstract

In experimental cerebral ischemia, melanocortin MC4 receptor agonists induce neuroprotection and neurogenesis with subsequent long-lasting functional recovery. Here we investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying melanocortin-induced neurogenesis. Gerbils were subjected to transient global cerebral ischemia, then they were treated every 12 h, and until sacrifice, with 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU; to label proliferating cells), and the melanocortin analog [Nle(4),d-Phe(7)]α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (NDP-α-MSH) or saline. NDP-α-MSH increased hippocampus dentate gyrus (DG) expression of Wnt-3A, β-catenin, Sonic hedgehog (Shh), Zif268, interleukin-10 (IL-10) and doublecortin (DCX), as detected at days 3, 6 and 10 after the ischemic insult. Further, an elevated number of BrdU immunoreactive cells was found at days 3 and 10, and an improved histological picture with reduced neuronal loss at day 10, associated with learning and memory recovery. Pharmacological blockade of the Wnt-3A/β-catenin and Shh pathways, as well as of melanocortin MC4 receptors, prevented all effects of NDP-α-MSH. These data indicate that, in experimental brain ischemia, treatment with melanocortins acting at MC4 receptors induces neural stem/progenitor cell proliferation in the DG by promptly and effectively triggering the canonical Wnt-3A/β-catenin and Shh signaling pathways. Activation of these pathways is associated with up-regulation of the repair factor Zif268 and the neurogenesis facilitating factor IL-10, and it seems to address mainly toward a neuronal fate, as indicated by the increase in DCX positive cells.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-03-25T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ejphar.2013.03.030

Citations

50

References

66