Quick Comparison
| KPV | VIP | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 0.5-1 hours | 1-2 minutes (rapidly degraded by peptidases) |
| Typical Dosage | Standard: 200-500 mcg subcutaneous once daily. Also used orally for gut inflammation or topically for skin conditions. Often cycled 4-8 weeks on, 2-4 weeks off. | Intranasal (preferred): 50 mcg per spray, one to four times daily. Subcutaneous: 50-100 mcg once daily. CIRS protocol (Shoemaker): intranasal delivery for brain and sinus access. Treatment duration varies by condition. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection, oral, or topical | Intranasal spray or subcutaneous injection |
| Research Papers | 15 papers | 32 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
KPV
KPV is a tripeptide (Lys-Pro-Val) derived from the C-terminal end of alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (α-MSH), specifically residues 11-13. While the full α-MSH molecule exerts anti-inflammatory effects primarily through melanocortin receptor activation (particularly MC1R), KPV achieves its anti-inflammatory activity through a distinct, receptor-independent mechanism that does not produce the tanning or sexual side effects associated with melanocortin receptor activation.
KPV's primary mechanism is direct inhibition of the NF-κB inflammatory signaling pathway. It enters cells (possibly through peptide transporters or direct membrane penetration due to its small size) and interacts with the IKK complex (IκB kinase), preventing the phosphorylation and subsequent proteasomal degradation of IκBα. When IκBα remains intact, it sequesters the NF-κB transcription factor (p65/p50 dimer) in the cytoplasm, preventing its nuclear translocation. This blocks transcription of a wide array of pro-inflammatory genes including TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, COX-2, and iNOS — effectively shutting down the inflammatory cascade at a master regulatory level.
This mechanism makes KPV particularly interesting for inflammatory conditions of the gut and skin, where NF-κB activation drives chronic inflammation. In intestinal epithelial cells, KPV reduces inflammatory cytokine production and may help restore barrier function in conditions like inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Topically, it suppresses cutaneous inflammation in models of contact dermatitis and psoriasis. The oral bioavailability of KPV — unusual for peptides — is attributed to its small size (only 3 amino acids) and resistance to gastrointestinal proteases, allowing it to reach the intestinal epithelium intact when taken orally. This clean anti-inflammatory profile without melanocortin receptor side effects makes KPV a focused anti-inflammatory tool.
VIP
Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide is a 28-amino-acid neuropeptide that belongs to the secretin/glucagon superfamily. It is widely distributed throughout the body — found in neurons of the central and peripheral nervous systems, immune cells, and the gastrointestinal tract — and acts through two G protein-coupled receptors: VPAC1 (expressed broadly) and VPAC2 (more restricted to CNS and immune tissue). Both receptors couple to Gs proteins, activating adenylyl cyclase and raising intracellular cAMP.
VIP's vasodilatory effect is among the most potent in the body. It relaxes vascular, airway, and gastrointestinal smooth muscle by activating cAMP/PKA signaling, which phosphorylates myosin light chain kinase and reduces calcium sensitivity in smooth muscle cells. In the pulmonary vasculature, this produces bronchodilation and reduced pulmonary artery pressure. In cerebral vasculature, VIP is a key regulator of blood flow.
The immunomodulatory effects are particularly relevant for its use in chronic inflammatory response syndrome (CIRS). VIP powerfully suppresses the Th1 (pro-inflammatory) immune response while promoting Th2 and regulatory T cell (Treg) differentiation. It inhibits macrophage production of TNF-α, IL-6, IL-12, and nitric oxide, and suppresses dendritic cell maturation and antigen presentation. This immune-balancing effect makes VIP valuable in conditions characterized by chronic Th1/Th17 immune dysregulation, such as mold illness/CIRS. In the brain, VIP is neuroprotective — it upregulates BDNF and activity-dependent neuroprotective protein (ADNP), supports circadian rhythm regulation in the suprachiasmatic nucleus, and protects neurons from inflammatory and oxidative damage. The extremely short plasma half-life (1-2 minutes) necessitates intranasal delivery for CNS effects, bypassing the blood-brain barrier through olfactory and trigeminal nerve transport.
Risks & Safety
KPV
Common
injection site irritation, mild flushing.
Serious
limited human safety data.
Rare
allergic reactions, theoretical risk of weakening the immune system with long-term high doses.
VIP
Common
diarrhea, widened blood vessels and facial flushing, nasal congestion when used as a nasal spray, mild low blood pressure.
Serious
significant drop in blood pressure in sensitive people or at high doses; fast heart rate from the body's response to widened blood vessels.
Rare
severe allergic reactions, airway narrowing. Very short half-life naturally limits how much reaches the rest of the body.
Full Profiles
KPV →
A small peptide derived from a hormone that regulates skin color. It keeps the strong anti-inflammatory and immune-balancing effects of the full hormone without causing skin tanning or sexual side effects. One of the cleanest anti-inflammatory peptides available, and it works when taken by mouth, injected, or applied to the skin. People use it for gut inflammation, skin conditions, and general inflammation.
VIP →
A natural peptide found throughout the body, especially in the nervous system, gut, and lungs. It widens blood vessels, calms inflammation, and helps balance the immune system. Most studied for chronic inflammatory conditions (like mold illness) and high blood pressure in the lungs, where it tones down excessive inflammatory signaling. People use it for CIRS, mold illness, and similar conditions.