Melanocortin Peptide Drug Design and Application to Feeding Behavior and Melanoma

The melanocortin system is comprised of 5 homeostatic G-protein coupled receptors, which regulate diverse physiological functions including skin pigmentation, erectile dysfunction, and feeding behavior. Melanocortin peptides have been applied to MC4Rs to control feeding behavior and MC1Rs to control...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McLeod, Kaitlyn Renee
Other Authors: Cai, Minying
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/579015
Description
Summary:The melanocortin system is comprised of 5 homeostatic G-protein coupled receptors, which regulate diverse physiological functions including skin pigmentation, erectile dysfunction, and feeding behavior. Melanocortin peptides have been applied to MC4Rs to control feeding behavior and MC1Rs to control skin pigmentation and melanoma progression. Orexin receptors, like MC4R, are expressed in the hypothalamus and affect feeding behavior, suggesting a complex relationship between orexin and melanocortin signaling. Competitive ligand binding and cAMP accumulation assays showed no stimulation of intracellular melanocortin signaling by orexin peptides, making direct cross talk between these receptors unlikely. Melanocortin peptides have also been applied to the treatment of melanoma, a cancer plagued by poor diagnosis and prognosis. Previous experimentation showed Rad-tagged NDP-α-MSH selectively binding melanoma tumors in vivo; repetitive treatments with Rho-MT-II, a non-specific melanocortin agonist, resulted in melanoma tumor shrinkage¹. In vitro, MTT colorimetric assays showed greater cell death when A375 melanoma cells were treated with an MC1R antagonist rather than an agonist. However, induction of hypotonic stress and apoptosis through simultaneous treatment with BzATP and MC1R agonist resulted an increased cell death. These results mark an important step towards developing targeted melanoma treatments.