I want to bring attention to a peptide that doesn't get enough discussion here: KPV (Lys-Pro-Val), a C-terminal tripeptide fragment of alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (α-MSH).
Why it's relevant to this community: many GLP-1 RA users deal with GI inflammation, and a subset have pre-existing IBD (Crohn's, UC) where the GI side effects of semaglutide/tirzepatide can be particularly problematic. KPV is one of the more promising anti-inflammatory peptides specifically targeting intestinal inflammation.
Key research:
- Dalmasso et al. (2008, PMID: 18316394) — KPV reduced colonic inflammation in a mouse model of colitis via inhibition of NF-κB activation and inflammatory cytokine secretion. Published in PNAS.
- Kannengiesser et al. (2008, PMID: 17932232) — melanocortin peptides including KPV showed anti-inflammatory effects in DSS-induced colitis model.
- Laroui et al. (2010, PMID: 20637790) — demonstrated that KPV loaded into nanoparticles could be delivered orally and effectively reduced colonic inflammation.
The Dalmasso paper is particularly interesting because it showed KPV works intracellularly — it crosses the cell membrane and directly inhibits NF-κB activation by preventing IκBα phosphorylation. This is a different mechanism than most anti-inflammatory peptides.