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BPC-157

Body Protection Compound-157, PL-14736, Pentadecapeptide BPC 157

Quick Stats
Studies 196
Trials 1
Score 3
2006 pubmed 29 citations

Accelerated healing of excisional skin wounds by PL 14736 in alloxan-hyperglycemic rats.

Seveljević-Jaran. D D; Cuzić. S S; Dominis-Kramarić. M M; Glojnarić. I I; Ivetić. V V; Radosević. S S; Parnham. M J MJ

Key Findings

  • In hyperglycemic rats, PL 14736 (10‑1000 µg per wound) accelerated skin wound healing in a dose‑dependent manner.
  • At the highest doses, its effect was comparable to becaplermin, a standard growth‑factor therapy for diabetic foot ulcers.
  • Treatment increased organized granulation tissue and mature collagen formation by day 7.
  • Wound contraction measured by planimetry was not significantly altered.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, PL 14736 shows promise as a future topical to speed up slow‑healing or diabetic wounds without the risks linked to growth‑factor drugs. However, the evidence is limited to animal studies, so it isn’t ready for self‑administration. Keep an eye out for human trials and dosing guidelines before considering it for personal use.

Summary

A lab-made peptide called PL 14736, taken from human gastric juice, was applied as a gel to full‑thickness skin cuts in rats with high blood sugar. It sped up wound healing in a dose‑dependent way, matching the performance of an FDA‑approved diabetic ulcer drug (becaplermin) by boosting the growth of healthy granulation tissue and collagen, though it didn’t change how much the wound shrank.

Abstract

PL 14736 is a synthetic peptide, originally isolated from human gastric juice, that has anti-inflammatory and tissue-protective actions in experimental models of gastrointestinal inflammation. To investigate its possible benefit in poorly healing skin wounds, the effects of the topical application of PL 14736 in a gel formulation have been studied on full-thickness excisional wounds in rats, either healthy or made hyperglycemic by alloxan (175 mg/kg s.c.) 5 days previously. The effects of becaplermin gel (platelet-derived growth factor, PDGF-BB, Regranex, a standard therapy for diabetic foot ulcers, were investigated for comparison. Healing was evaluated for up to 7 days after wounding, using digital planimetry analysis, macroscopic scoring and histology. While healing was too rapid in healthy rats to observe enhancement by either treatment, in the hyperglycemic rats which exhibited delayed healing, PL 14736 (10-1,000 microg/wound) produced a dose-dependent acceleration of wound healing (determined by macroscopic scoring) equivalent at the highest doses to that observed with becaplermin. The beneficial effect on healing was associated with increased deposition of organized granulation tissue by day 7 for both PL 14736 and becaplermin, as determined histologically. PL 14736 tended to have a greater effect than becaplermin on the formation of granulation tissue containing mature collagen. Wound contraction, as measured by planimetry, was not significantly affected. In conclusion, topical PL 14736 produces a dose-dependent acceleration of deficient skin wound healing in hyperglycemic rats by facilitating granulation tissue formation, similar to the response seen with topical becaplermin, the standard therapy for diabetic skin wounds. PL 14736 may represent an alternative therapy for delayed wound healing, such as that seen with diabetic foot ulcers, without the proliferative concerns or immunogenicity associated with growth factors.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-06-16T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1159/000093982

Citations

29

References

34