Stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157-NO-system relation.
Sikiric. Predrag P; Seiwerth. Sven S; Rucman. Rudolf R; Turkovic. Branko B; Rokotov. Dinko Stancic DS; Brcic. Luka L; Sever. Marko M; Klicek. Robert R; Radic. Bozo B; Drmic. Domagoj D; Ilic. Spomenko S; Kolenc. Danijela D; Aralica. Gorana G; Stupnisek. Mirjana M; Suran. Jelena J; Barisic. Ivan I; Dzidic. Senka S; Vrcic. Hrvoje H; Sebecic. Bozidar B
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 consistently accelerates healing in acute and chronic injuries across many tissues, even those that normally heal poorly.
- It modulates the NO system, counteracting both NO‑blocking (L‑NAME) and NO‑enhancing (L‑arginine) agents, and up‑regulates eNOS‑related genes.
- High safety profile reported in pre‑clinical work (no lethal dose identified).
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, BPC‑157 looks promising as a broad‑spectrum healing peptide that may support gut health, vascular integrity, and cardiovascular function. However, the review does not provide human dosing guidelines, so any use should start with low doses and careful monitoring of blood pressure and NO‑related side effects. More clinical data are needed before definitive protocols can be recommended.
Summary
The paper reviews how BPC‑157, a peptide naturally made in the stomach, works together with the body’s nitric‑oxide (NO) system to speed up healing in many different injury models. It can help keep blood vessels intact, reduce dangerous clotting or bleeding depending on the situation, protect the gut from alcohol damage, and improve heart and lung problems, all while showing very low toxicity in animal studies.
Abstract
We reviewed stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157-NO-system-relation, its close participation in Moncada's (maintained vascular integrity, platelets control) homeostatic healing response of NO-system to injury. Namely, BPC 157's particular healing effect also affects all events after vascular integrity loss (dependent on circumstances, it reduces either thrombosis (abdominal aorta anastomosis) or bleeding/thrombocytopenia (amputation, heparin, warfarin, aspirin)) and in a series of different injurious models, acute and chronic, BPC 157 consistently advances healing after severe injuries in various tissues spontaneously unable to heal; stimulates egr-1 and naB2 genes; exhibits high safety (LD1 not achieved)). Hypothesis, that BPC 157 (since formed constitutively in the gastric mucosa, stable in human gastric juice, along with significance of NO-synthase and the basal formation of NO in stomach mucosa, greater than that seen in other tissues) exhibits a general, effective competing both with L-arginine analogues (i. e., L-NAME) and L-arginine, and that this has some physiologic importance (NO-generation), later, practically supports its beneficial effects illustrating BPC 157 and NOsystem mutual (with L-NAME/L-arginine; alone and together) relations in (i) gastric mucosa and mucosal protection, following alcohol lesions, in cytoprotection course, NO-generation, and blood pressure regulation; (ii) alcohol acute/chronic intoxication, and withdrawal; (iii) cardiovascular disturbances, chronic heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, and arrhythmias; (iv) disturbances after hypokalemia and hyperkalemia, and potassium-cell membrane dysfunction; and finally, in (v) complex healing failure, proved by the fistulas healing, colocutaneous and esophagocutaneous. However, how this advantage of modulating NO-system (i. e., particular effect on eNOS gene), may be practically translated into an enhanced clinical performance remains to be determined.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-01-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.2174/13816128113190990411
93