PMID-18061177 – KPV PepT1-Mediated Uptake Reduces Intestinal Inflammation

PMID-18061177 – KPV PepT1-Mediated Uptake Reduces Intestinal Inflammation

Dalmasso G, Charrier-Hisamuddin L, Nguyen HT, Yan Y, Sitaraman S, Merlin D. PepT1-mediated tripeptide KPV uptake reduces intestinal inflammation. Gastroenterology. 2008;134(1):166-178.

Quick Reference

Property Value
PMID 18061177
DOI 10.1053/j.gastro.2007.10.026
Year 2008
Journal Gastroenterology
Study Type Animal in vivo
Evidence Level V
Sample Murine models (DSS and TNBS colitis)
Peptide(s) Studied KPV

Key Findings

  • KPV is transported into colonocytes via the intestinal peptide transporter PepT1, establishing a specific uptake mechanism for this tripeptide in the gut
  • Oral administration of KPV significantly reduced colonic inflammation in both DSS-induced and TNBS-induced murine colitis models
  • KPV inhibited NF-κB activation in colonocytes, providing a mechanistic explanation for its anti-inflammatory effects
  • PepT1 expression is upregulated during intestinal inflammation, potentially enhancing KPV uptake at sites of active disease
  • The study demonstrated that KPV retains anti-inflammatory activity when delivered orally, supporting the feasibility of oral peptide therapy for colitis

Study Design

In vivo murine colitis models using both DSS (dextran sodium sulfate) and TNBS (2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid) to induce acute colitis. KPV was administered orally and its uptake was assessed via PepT1 transporter function in colonocyte cultures. NF-κB activation was measured in treated and untreated cells. Histological scoring and cytokine analysis were used to assess anti-inflammatory efficacy.

Limitations

  • Animal model data; no human clinical validation
  • Short-term colitis models may not reflect chronic IBD pathophysiology
  • Dose-response relationships in humans remain undefined
  • PepT1 expression and function may differ between murine and human intestinal epithelium

Clinical Relevance

This is a cornerstone GI mechanism study for KPV. It establishes that KPV has a specific intestinal transporter (PepT1) enabling oral bioavailability in the colon, and demonstrates direct anti-inflammatory activity via NF-κB inhibition. The upregulation of PepT1 during inflammation suggests a self-amplifying therapeutic mechanism — the more inflamed the tissue, the more KPV it absorbs. This provides strong preclinical rationale for KPV in inflammatory bowel conditions and supports oral capsule formulations.

Related

#research #animal-in-vivo #evidence-level-V