Biologically active monoiodinated alpha-MSH derivatives for receptor binding studies using human melanoma cells.
Eberle. A N AN; Verin. V J VJ; Solca. F F; Siegrist. W W; Küenlin. C C; Bagutti. C C; Stutz. S S; Girard. J J
Key Findings
- All three radiolabeled alpha‑MSH variants keep strong melanotropic activity in standard melanin assays
- The [Tyr(125I)2,NIe4]-alpha‑MSH tracer shows a lot of non‑specific binding that isn’t easily displaced
- The simple [Tyr(125I)2]-alpha‑MSH tracer has low non‑specific binding (≤20% of total) and is a reliable research tool
Practical Outcomes
- This study is purely methodological and doesn’t provide actionable information for personal use of melanotan‑I. It only helps scientists choose the best radioligand for lab experiments, not how to dose or benefit from the peptide in humans.
Summary
The paper compares three iodine‑labeled versions of the hormone alpha‑MSH used only as lab tools to study how the peptide sticks to melanoma cells, and it doesn’t give any dosing, safety, or performance advice for people who might want to use melanotan‑I themselves.
Abstract
Three different monoiodinated radioligands of alpha-MSH (alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone) were compared in a binding assay with human D10 melanoma cells: [Tyr(125I)2]-alpha-MSH, [Tyr(125I)2,NIe4]-alpha-MSH, and [Tyr(125I)2,NIe4,D-Phe7]-alpha-MSH. They were prepared either by the classical chloramine T method or by the Enzymobead method. A simple and rapid purification scheme was developed consisting of a primary separation on reversed-phase C18 silica cartridges immediately after the iodination, followed by HPLC purification before each binding experiment. Biological testing of the three radioligands showed that they all retained high melanotropic activity in the B16 melanin assay and the Anolis melanophore assay. However, in human D10 melanoma cells, [Tyr(125I)2,NIe4]-alpha-MSH led to a high degree of non-specific binding to the cells which could not be displaced by excess alpha-MSH and only partially by [NIe4]-alpha-MSH. The [Tyr(125I)2,NIe4,D-Phe7]-alpha-MSH tracer gave similar results but with a much lower proportion of non-specific binding. On the other hand, [Tyr(125I)2]-alpha-MSH proved to be an excellent radioligand whose non-specific binding to the D10 cells was not higher than 20% of the total binding.
Study Information
pubmed
1991
10.3109/10799899109066410
41
8