Xin Liu, Jie Liu, Bin Li, Zihan Qian, Guorui Zhang, Haoyang Gan, Zhiruo Li, Xiaoya Han, Zhuo Wang, Yuansheng Li, Xinyan Zheng, Litian Wang, Saige Yin, Wenrou Su, Li He, Ying Wang, Mingying Luo, Xinwang Yang. 2026. First identification of an amphibian-derived peptide with anti-vascular aging activity. Zoological Research. DOI: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2025.499
Citation: Xin Liu, Jie Liu, Bin Li, Zihan Qian, Guorui Zhang, Haoyang Gan, Zhiruo Li, Xiaoya Han, Zhuo Wang, Yuansheng Li, Xinyan Zheng, Litian Wang, Saige Yin, Wenrou Su, Li He, Ying Wang, Mingying Luo, Xinwang Yang. 2026. First identification of an amphibian-derived peptide with anti-vascular aging activity. Zoological Research. DOI: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2025.499

First identification of an amphibian-derived peptide with anti-vascular aging activity

  • Vascular aging is a principal driver of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Effective prevention of age-related vascular pathologies requires interventions that modulate core molecular and cellular aging pathways. This study evaluated the anti-vascular aging effects and underlying mechanisms of AL-VI10, a novel amphibian skin-derived bioactive peptide. Notably, AL-VI10 exhibited excellent biosafety, with no cytotoxicity or hemolytic activity, coupled with potent free radical scavenging capacity, enhanced antioxidant enzyme activity, and reduced reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation. In a D-galactose-induced aging mouse model, AL-VI10 significantly attenuated vascular aging phenotypes, including increased medial thickness, inflammatory cytokine expression, and matrix metalloproteinase levels, while promoting autophagy. In hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂)-induced senescent human umbilical vein endothelial cells, AL-VI10 decreased senescence-associated β-galactosidase (SA-β-gal) activity, down-regulated senescence markers p53 and p21, stimulated endothelial proliferation and migration, and increased endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression. Mechanistic investigations showed that AL-VI10 up-regulated silent information regulator 1 (SIRT1) and nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) expression. Inhibition of SIRT1 suppressed AL-VI10-induced Nrf2 activation and diminished its anti-senescence effects, while Nrf2 inhibition reversed ROS reduction and impaired endothelial recovery. Moreover, AL-VI10 bound to the extracellular domain of leukocyte differentiation antigen CD44 (CD44), with CD44 knockdown shown to abolish SIRT1-Nrf2 activation and neutralize the anti-senescence activity of AL-VI10. These results demonstrate that AL-VI10 alleviates vascular aging via CD44-mediated activation of the SIRT1-Nrf2 signaling pathway, highlighting amphibians as a valuable source of novel bioactive compounds for anti-aging therapies.
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