CalcMyPeptide
NeuroprotectiveAlso known as: L-Tyrosyl-L-Arginine, Tyr-Arg, KTP

Kyotorphin

Endogenous dipeptide (Tyr-Arg) discovered in bovine brain — releases met-enkephalin, produces analgesia, and demonstrates neuroprotective and anti-amyloid properties in preclinical models.

Half-Life
~0.3 hours
Dose Range
1-10 mg ICV/intranasal (research)
Frequency
Per study protocol
Vial Sizes
5 mg

🔬 Mechanism of Action

Kyotorphin (L-Tyr-L-Arg) is an endogenous analgesic dipeptide originally isolated from bovine brain in 1979 by Takagi et al. at Kyoto University. It exerts its analgesic effects primarily by stimulating the release of Met-enkephalin from spinal cord and brain neurons, effectively activating the endogenous opioid system without directly binding opioid receptors. Kyotorphin also inhibits DPP-III (dipeptidyl peptidase III), the primary enzyme that degrades enkephalins, thereby amplifying endogenous analgesia. Recent research demonstrates neuroprotective properties: Kyotorphin reduces amyloid-β aggregation in neuronal cell cultures and modulates NMDA receptor activity, suggesting potential applications in Alzheimer disease research.

Source: PMID: 3427544

📜Background & History

Kyotorphin was discovered in 1979 by Hiroshi Takagi at Kyoto University during a systematic search for endogenous analgesic substances in bovine brain. It was the first non-opioid endogenous analgesic dipeptide identified. Recent decades have expanded interest beyond analgesia to neuroprotection: Kyotorphin derivatives show promise in reducing amyloid-β neurotoxicity and modulating glutamatergic transmission, making it a candidate for Alzheimer disease research.

🎯 Research Use Cases

  • Endogenous analgesia research
  • Neuroprotection research
  • Alzheimer disease research
  • NMDA receptor modulation

💉 Dosing Protocol

Typical Dose1-10 mg ICV/intranasal (research)
FrequencyPer study protocol
Half-Life~0.3 hours
Common Vial Sizes5 mg

🧪 Reconstitution Example

Vial
5 mg
Water
1 mL
Concentration
5 mg/mL
Per Unit (100u syringe)
50 mcg
Dose of 1000 mcg = 20 units on a 100-unit insulin syringe

⚠️Safety & Considerations

Endogenous molecule with expected safety at physiological concentrations. Blood-brain barrier penetration is limited for exogenous administration — intranasal and amidated derivatives are under investigation. Research-only compound.

Interactions & Contraindications

Research compound. May potentiate effects of opioid analgesics through enkephalin amplification. Theoretical interaction with NMDA modulators.

🔗Synergies & Common Stacks

Kyotorphin (enkephalin release) + Selank (anxiolytic tuftsin analogue) — both modulate endogenous opioid and enkephalin systems through complementary mechanisms.

Kyotorphin + Semax for dual neuroprotective approach: Kyotorphin via enkephalin/NMDA modulation, Semax via BDNF expression.

📊 Dosing Quick Reference

Kyotorphin— Dosing Guide
Dose Range
1-10 mg ICV/intranasal (research)
Half-Life
~0.3 hours
Frequency
Per study protocol
Route
Subcutaneous
5 mg vial
💧 1 mL BAC water📐 5 mg/mL concentration💉 50 mcg/unit (100u syringe)
Neuroprotectivecalcmypeptide.com

Frequently Asked Questions

How does Kyotorphin produce analgesia?
Unlike opioids, Kyotorphin does not bind opioid receptors directly. Instead, it stimulates the release of Met-enkephalin (an endogenous opioid) from neurons and inhibits the enzyme that breaks down enkephalins. This produces analgesia through the natural opioid system.