This review consolidates evidence that KPV — the C-terminal tripeptide of alpha-MSH — retains nearly all of the parent hormone's anti-inflammatory activity across a wide range of tissues and disease models, but without the pigment-stimulating side effect. KPV works through mechanisms that overlap with alpha-MSH (including NF-kB suppression) even though it doesn't bind to any known melanocortin receptor, and a related analog, KdPT, shares similar properties. The authors make the case that these short peptides are practical drug candidates for inflammatory skin and bowel conditions, asthma, and arthritis.
Brzoska, Thomas; Böhm, Markus; Lügering, Andreas; Loser, Karin; Luger, Thomas A