4.6 Article

The α-melanocyte stimulating hormone-related tripeptide K(D)PT stimulates human hair follicle pigmentation in situ under proinflammatory conditions

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY
Volume 160, Issue 2, Pages 433-437

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2133.2008.08872.x

Keywords

human hair follicle; IL-1 beta; K(D)PT; alpha-MSH; melanogenesis; pigmentation

Categories

Funding

  1. Wolff Arzneimittel, Bielefeld
  2. Faculty Research Focus Programme on Autoimmunity, University of Lubeck
  3. National Alopecia Areata Foundation (NAAF), U.S.A.

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alpha-Melanocyte stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) is a well-tolerated immunomodulator with cytoprotective and anti-inflammatory effects that is known to stimulate melanogenesis and proliferation of follicular melanocytes. As human hair follicles (HFs) locally synthesize alpha-MSH, pharmacologically more easily handled alpha-MSH-related tripeptides, such as K(D)PT, may imitate this endogenous regulation, and may show a favourable side-effect profile on clinical use. To investigate the effect of the synthetic, alpha-MSH-related peptide K(D)PT [which is identical to interleukin (IL)-1 beta(193-195)] on melanogenesis in human anagen HFs, under normal and proinflammatory growth conditions. Normal human anagen VI scalp HFs were microdissected and organ cultured with different concentrations of K(D)PT with or without coadministration of a proinflammatory, catagen-inducing stimulus, interferon (INF)-gamma. Masson-Fontana histochemistry and NKI/beteb immunohistochemistry were employed to assess changes in the degree of human HF pigmentation and melanocyte dendricity. As confirmed by quantitative (immuno-)histomorphometry, compared with controls, K(D)PT alone did not affect human HF pigmentation in organ culture. However, in the presence of a strong, prototypic proinflammatory stimulus (IFN-gamma), K(D)PT significantly stimulated HF melanin content and melanocyte dendrite formation in situ. The IL-1 beta- and alpha-MSH-related tripeptide, K(D)PT, displays interesting hair pigmentation-stimulatory activities under proinflammatory conditions. These might become exploitable for innovative antigreying strategies, notably in postinflammatory poliosis (regrowth of white hair, e.g. during recovery from alopecia areata), where no effective clinical therapy is yet available.

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