0
Home
/
Adipotide 2mg*10vials Per Kit
Adipotide 2mg*10vials Per Kit
Quantity
Important Notices:
· This product is sold for scientific research purposes only.
· Product is provided as a lyophilized (freeze-dried) powder in a sealed, sterile vial.
· The quantity on the label refers to the total amount of product inside each vial.
· Additional lab supplies are required for conducting research such as bacteriostatic water for reconstitution, syringes & needles to draw from the vials, and alcohol prep pads for sanitizing vial stoppers prior to needle insertion.
· Vial appearance, label, seal and cap colors may vary from product photos.
· This product is sold for scientific research purposes only.
· Product is provided as a lyophilized (freeze-dried) powder in a sealed, sterile vial.
· The quantity on the label refers to the total amount of product inside each vial.
· Additional lab supplies are required for conducting research such as bacteriostatic water for reconstitution, syringes & needles to draw from the vials, and alcohol prep pads for sanitizing vial stoppers prior to needle insertion.
· Vial appearance, label, seal and cap colors may vary from product photos.
Detail
What is Adipotide?
Adipotide (a.k.a. FTPP or proapototic peptide) kills fat cells, plain and simple, by targeting the blood supply of those cells. Interestingly, adipotide is able to discern the blood vessels in fat cells from the blood vessels throughout the rest of the body and is therefore highly selective. Research in monkeys shows that adipotide not only causes weight loss, it actually boosts insulin sensitivity and offsets some of the effects of type 2 diabetes.
Adipotide Structure
Sequence: Cys-Lys-Gly-Gly-Arg-Ala-Lys-Asp-Cys—Gly-Gly--(Lys-Leu-Ala-Lys-Leu-Ala-Lys)2
Molecular Formula: C152H252N44O42
Molecular Weight: 2611.41 g/mol
Adipotide Research
1. Adipotide And Fat Loss
Adipotide was developed and placed into phase I clinical trials in 2011 to investigate its ability to kill fat cells. Tests in rhesus monkeys revealed that adipotide causes targeted apoptosis in the blood vessels of white adipose tissue (fat). Without a blood supply, the fat cells simply died. The net result was rapid weight loss, rapid decrease in body mass index (BMI), and improved insulin resistance characteristics. Interestingly, treatment with adipotide and subsequent fat loss not only improved weight, but actually contributed to changes in eating behavior. Monkeys who lost weight with adipotide also showed a decrease in food consumption.
A. Percent weight loss in control groups (blue) versus those treated with adipotide (two differing doses, shown in red)
B. Percent reduction in BMI (control versus treatment)
A. Shows the change in insulin requirements (area under the curve) for treated (red) and control (blue) groups. The AUC was calculated from an IVGTT test.
B. Shows the insulinogenic index for before and after in the treatment (red) and control (blue) groups. Treated groups show a dramatic decrease in insulin secretion.
C. Change in biscuit consumption in treated (red) and control (blue) groups.
The targeting of adipotide to the blood vessels serving fat cells may be mediated by a protein receptor called prohibitin. Prohibitin is a membrane protein that may only be found in blood vessels serving white fat and in cancer cells. It has been demonstrated that adipotide associates with this protein. If it turns out that prohibitin is found only in fat vasculature and cancer tissue, then adipotide testing will be responsible for identifying a fat-specific target that can be used not just for therapeutic purposes, but for diagnostic purposes as well.
2. Adipotide and Cancer
Prohibitin, the molecule that adipotide likely targets in fat cells, has been associated with certain types of cancer. Cancer cells are known to require substantial blood supplies in order to grow and metastasize. The ability to target prohibitin in cancer cells may provide for advanced therapies that target cancer without harming surrounding tissues.
3. Adipotide and Glucose Tolerance
Glucose tolerance is a term that refers to higher than normal levels of blood sugar. The condition is generally diagnosed with a blood test and confirmed by testing fasting glucose levels or by administering a glucose tolerance test in which a set amount of sugar is consumed and then blood levels of sugar are measured. Glucose tolerance is a proxy measure for diabetes, with increased glucose tolerance indicating a trend toward diabetes.
Treating elevated glucose levels can be done with diet and exercise, but these methods require dedication and motivation. They also take considerable time to have an effect. In general, most people with impaired glucose tolerance go on to develop overt type 2 diabetes and require drugs like metformin and, in some cases, insulin. Research into adipotide has revealed that the peptide produces rapid and weight-independent improvement in glucose tolerance. The latter part is critical, because it indicates that a reduction in white fat by adipotide is effective in reducing glucose tolerance regardless of the impact on weight. In other words, it is the fat loss that is important, not the weight loss. These findings not only open the pathway for developing new treatments for pre-diabetes and diabetes, they help to clarify and explain the mechanisms that lead to diabetes in the first place.
There is some argument as to whether adipotide directly causes fat loss or simply decreases food intake which indirectly leads to fat loss. It is likely that adipotide directly causes fat loss. This hypothesis is supported by the fact that the peptide causes changes in fat cell density without causing weight loss and affects glucose tolerance without causing weight loss.
Future Adipotide Research
The primary area of adipotide research is in fat loss and diabetes. The peptide targets specific cells in the blood vessels that supply fat tissue, causing those blood vessels to die and, as a result, causing the fat cells they supply to die. Adipotide is an anti-angiogenic peptide, which means it targets blood vessels. Anti-angiogenic molecules are of keen interest right now in the treatment of cancer. There is limited, but promising research, on the role of adipotide in cancer.
Adipotide exhibits minimal side effects, low oral and excellent subcutaneous bioavailability in mice. Per kg dosage in mice does not scale to humans. Adipotide for sale at Peptide Sciences is limited to educational and scientific research only, not for human consumption. Only buy Adipotide if you are a licensed researcher.
Customer Reviews