Ligands for Melanocortin Receptors: Beyond Melanocyte-Stimulating Hormones and Adrenocorticotropin.
Yuan. Xiao-Chen XC; Tao. Ya-Xiong YX
Key Findings
- Neural melanocortin receptors MC3R and MC4R are key regulators of energy balance and body weight.
- Bremelanotide (pt‑141) is a clinically approved ligand that targets these receptors, mainly used for sexual dysfunction.
- The review suggests potential repurposing of melanocortin ligands for obesity or cachexia, but data are still limited.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, bremelanotide could be explored as a tool to influence appetite or mood, but current evidence is mostly theoretical. Start with medically approved doses, monitor metabolic markers, and be aware of side‑effects. More research is needed before recommending it for weight control.
Summary
This review explains how the brain’s melanocortin receptors (especially MC3R and MC4R) control hunger, weight and energy use, and lists the drugs that can activate them, including the peptide bremelanotide (pt‑141). It shows that bremelanotide is already approved for low sexual desire and hints it might affect metabolism, but it doesn’t give new dosing rules or direct protocols for biohackers.
Abstract
The discovery of melanocortins in 1916 has resulted in more than 100 years of research focused on these peptides. Extensive studies have elucidated well-established functions of melanocortins mediated by cell surface receptors, including MSHR (melanocyte-stimulating hormone receptor) and ACTHR (adrenocorticotropin receptor). Subsequently, three additional melanocortin receptors (MCRs) were identified. Among these five MCRs, MC3R and MC4R are expressed primarily in the central nervous system, and are therefore referred to as the neural MCRs. Since the central melanocortin system plays important roles in regulating energy homeostasis, targeting neural MCRs is emerging as a therapeutic approach for treating metabolic conditions such as obesity and cachexia. Early efforts modifying endogenous ligands resulted in the development of many potent and selective ligands. This review focuses on the ligands for neural MCRs, including classical ligands (MSH and agouti-related peptide), nonclassical ligands (lipocalin 2, β-defensin, small molecules, and pharmacoperones), and clinically approved ligands (ACTH, setmelanotide, bremelanotide, and several repurposed drugs).
Study Information
pubmed
2022
2022-10-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/biom12101407
12
243