Larazotide Acetate vs PNC-27
Side-by-side comparison of key properties, dosing, and research.
Recovery & Repair
Larazotide AcetateImmune Support
PNC-27- Summary
- Larazotide acetate is an 8-amino acid peptide (Gly-Gly-Val-Leu-Val-Gln-Pro-Gly) derived from Zonula Occludens Toxin (ZOT) of Vibrio cholerae. It paradoxically acts as a ZOT antagonist to close tight junctions and reduce intestinal permeability ('leaky gut'). It is the most advanced clinical compound targeting gut permeability directly.
- PNC-27 is a synthetic peptide derived from the p53 tumor suppressor protein, containing both an HDM2-binding domain and a transmembrane penetratin sequence. It selectively kills cancer cells by binding MDM2/HDM2 overexpressed on the plasma membrane of malignant cells, inducing membranolysis without harming normal cells.
- Half-Life
- Local gut action; minimal systemic exposure
- Not well established; estimated minutes to hours
- Admin Route
- Oral
- Intravenous (research), Intraperitoneal (research)
- Research
- —
- —
- Typical Dose
- 0.5-2 mg
- Not established for humans; research doses vary by cell line and model
- Frequency
- 3x daily
- Not established for human use
- Key Benefits
- Directly reduces intestinal tight junction permeability
- Clinical efficacy in celiac disease (Phase 3 trials)
- Reduces systemic inflammation from gut permeability
- Targets root cause of leaky gut (Zonulin pathway)
- Local gut action without systemic absorption
- Potential application in IBS, IBD, autoimmune conditions
- Selective cytotoxicity against cancer cells overexpressing HDM2/MDM2
- Spares normal cells lacking surface HDM2 expression
- Membranolytic mechanism bypasses intracellular resistance pathways
- Demonstrated activity against breast, pancreatic, leukemia, and melanoma cell lines
- Potential for combination with conventional chemotherapy
- Novel non-genotoxic anticancer mechanism
- Side Effects
- Headache (mild, dose-dependent)
- Nausea (rare)
- Well-tolerated overall in clinical trials
- Limited human clinical data; largely in vitro and animal studies
- Potential immunogenic reactions (foreign peptide)
- Systemic toxicity at high doses not well characterized
- Unknown interactions with current chemotherapy agents
- Stacks With
- —
- —