The effect of pentadecapeptide BPC 157 on hippocampal ischemia/reperfusion injuries in rats.
Vukojević. Jakša J; Vrdoljak. Borna B; Malekinušić. Dominik D; Siroglavić. Marko M; Milavić. Marija M; Kolenc. Danijela D; Boban Blagaić. Alenka A; Batelja. Lovorka L; Drmić. Domagoj D; Seiverth. Sven S; Sikirić. Predrag P
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 (10 µg/kg) given 30 seconds after reperfusion prevented early and delayed hippocampal damage in rats.
- Treated rats fully recovered in memory (Morris water maze) and motor tests (beam‑walking, lateral push).
- The peptide sharply increased protective gene expression (Egr1, Akt1, Vegfr2, Nos3, etc.) and decreased inflammatory genes (Nos2, Nfkb).
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests BPC‑157 could be a powerful neuroprotective agent for stroke, but it’s only been tested in rats with a direct brain‑area bath, not via oral or injectable routes used by humans. Biohackers should view this as early‑stage evidence and wait for human safety and dosing data before considering self‑experimentation. If exploring, any dose would need careful scaling and medical supervision.
Summary
In a rat study, a tiny peptide called BPC‑157 was applied right after blood flow was restored to the brain following a short blockage. The treatment dramatically reduced damage to the hippocampus, helped the animals recover memory and movement abilities, and switched on several protective genes while turning off harmful ones. While the results look promising for stroke protection, the work was done in rats with a direct brain‑area application, so it isn’t a ready‑to‑use protocol for people.
Abstract
We focused on the, yet undescribed, therapy effect of the stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 in hippocampal ischemia/reperfusion injuries, after bilateral clamping of the common carotid arteries in rats. The background is the proven therapy effect of BPC 157 in ischemia/reperfusion injuries in different tissues. Furthermore, there is the subsequent oxidative stress counteraction, particularly when given during reperfusion. The recovering effect it has on occluded vessels, results with activation of the alternative pathways, bypassing the occlusion in deep vein thrombosis. Finally, the BPC 157 therapy benefits with its proposed role as a novel mediator of Roberts' cytoprotection and bidirectional effects in the gut-brain axis. Male Wistar rats underwent bilateral clamping of the common carotid arteries for a 20-min period. At 30 s thereafter, we applied medication (BPC 157 10 µg/kg; or saline) as a 1 ml bath directly to the operated area, that is, trigonum caroticum. We documented, in reperfusion, the resolution of the neuronal damages sustained in the brain, resolution of the damages reflected in memory, locomotion, and coordination disturbances, with the presentation of the particular genes expression in hippocampal tissues. In the operated rats, at 24 and 72 hr of the reperfusion, the therapy counteracted both early and delayed neural hippocampal damage, achieving full functional recovery (Morris water maze test, inclined beam-walking test, lateral push test). mRNA expression studies at 1 and 24 hr, provided strongly elevated (Egr1, Akt1, Kras, Src, Foxo, Srf, Vegfr2, Nos3, and Nos1) and decreased (Nos2, Nfkb) gene expression (Mapk1 not activated), as a way how BPC 157 may act. Together, these findings suggest that these beneficial BPC 157 effects may provide a novel therapeutic solution for stroke.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-06-18T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/brb3.1726
46
105