Discovery of prototype peptidomimetic agonists at the human melanocortin receptors MC1R and MC4R.
Haskell-Luevano. C C; Hendrata. S S; North. C C; Sawyer. T K TK; Hadley. M E ME; Hruby. V J VJ; Dickinson. C C; Gantz. I I
Key Findings
- A tetrapeptide (Ac‑His‑DPhe‑Arg‑Trp‑NH2) binds MC1R (0.6 µM) and MC4R (1.2 µM) and acts as an agonist.
- Two tripeptides bind only MC4R with 2.0 µM and 9.1 µM affinity and act as agonists.
- The classic His‑Phe‑Arg‑Trp sequence does not activate all melanocortin receptors equally, indicating receptor‑specific preferences.
Practical Outcomes
- These findings are mostly of scientific interest and don’t translate into a ready‑to‑use protocol for tanning, appetite control, or performance. More work is needed to boost potency, test safety, and determine dosing before biohackers could consider these peptides for real‑world use.
Summary
Scientists found that very short peptide fragments (four‑ or three‑amino‑acid pieces) can stick to and activate two skin‑related receptors, MC1R and MC4R, but they do so only at relatively weak (micromolar) levels. This shows the basic building blocks can work, but the compounds aren’t potent enough yet for practical use.
Abstract
[Nle4, DPhe7]-alpha-MSH (NDP-MSH), a highly potent analogue of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH), possesses nanomolar efficacies at all the melanocortin receptor subtypes except the MC2R. Evaluation of the melanocortin "message" sequence of [Nle4, DPhe7]-alpha-MSH was performed on the human melanocortin receptor subtypes designated hMC1, hMC3R, hMC4R, and hMC5R. Tetrapeptides and tripeptides were stereochemically modified to explore topochemical preferences at these receptors and to identify lead peptides possessing agonist activity and subtype selectivity. Four peptides were discovered to only bind to the hMC1 and hMC4 receptor subtypes. The tetrapeptide Ac-His-DPhe-Arg-Trp-NH2 (1) possessed 0.6 microM binding affinity at the hMC1R, 1.2 microM binding affinity at the hMC4R, and agonist activity at both receptors. The tripeptides Ac-DPhe-Arg-Trp-NH2 (6) and Ac-DPhe-Arg-DTrp-NH2 (7) possessed 2.0 and 9.1 microM binding affinities, respectively, only at the hMC4R, and both compounds effected agonist activity. The tetrapeptide Ac-His-Phe-Arg-DTrp-NH2 (4) possessed 6.3 microM affinity and full agonist activity at the hMC1R, while only binding 7% at the hMC3R, 36% at the hMC4R, and 11% at the hMC5R at a maximal concentration of 10 microM. These data demonstrate that the His-Phe-Arg-Trp message sequence of the melanocortin peptides does not bind and stimulate each melanocortin receptor in a similar fashion, as previously hypothesized. Additionally, this study identified the simplest structural agonists for the hMC1R and hMC4R receptors reported to date.
Study Information
pubmed
1997
1997-07-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1021/jm960840h