Effects of pentadecapeptide BPC157 on regional serotonin synthesis in the rat brain: alpha-methyl-L-tryptophan autoradiographic measurements.
Tohyama. Y Y; Sikirić. P P; Diksic. M M
Key Findings
- A single 10 µg/kg intraperitoneal dose reduced serotonin synthesis in the dorsal thalamus, hippocampus, lateral geniculate body, and hypothalamus.
- The same acute dose increased serotonin synthesis in the substantia nigra reticulata and medial anterior olfactory nucleus.
- After 7 days of daily 10 µg/kg subcutaneous dosing, serotonin synthesis dropped in the dorsal raphe nucleus and rose in the substantia nigra, lateral caudate, nucleus accumbens, and superior olive.
- No significant change was seen in raphe nuclei after the acute dose.
Practical Outcomes
- The data suggests BPC‑157 can modulate brain serotonin pathways in rats, but there is no clear guidance for human use. Biohackers should view this as early, animal‑only evidence and not base dosing or performance protocols on it until human studies confirm safety and effects.
Summary
In rats, a single low dose of the gut peptide BPC‑157 changed how much serotonin was made in several brain areas, and a week of daily dosing caused a different pattern of changes. Some regions made less serotonin, while others made more. The study shows BPC‑157 can affect brain chemistry, but it doesn’t explain how or whether the same would happen in people.
Abstract
A novel pentadecapeptide, BPC157, was recently reported to have a large spectrum of in vivo activities, from anti-ulcer to central action on the brain dopaminergic system. The mechanisms of these actions are not well understood. In this study, the evaluation of the effects of acute and repeated administration of BPC157 on serotonin (5-HT) synthesis in the rat brain is reported. The alpha-[14C]methyl-L-tryptophan (alpha-MTrp) autoradiographic method was used to measure regional 5-HT synthesis rates. In the first series of experiments, a single dose treatment of BPC157 (10 microg/kg) administered intraperitoneally 40 min before the alpha-MTrp tracer injection significantly reduced the regional rate of 5-HT synthesis in the dorsal thalamus, hippocampus, lateral geniculate body and hypothalamus. 5-HT synthesis rates in the substantia nigra reticulate and medial anterior olfactory nucleus in BPC157 treated rats were significantly higher than in the control rats. No significant change in the synthesis rate was observed in the raphe nuclei. In the second series of experiments, following a 7-day treatment with BPC157 (10 microg/kg; s.c.), a significant reduction in the 5-HT synthesis rate was observed in the dorsal raphe nucleus, and significant increases were observed in the substantia nigra, lateral caudate, accumbens nucleus and superior olive. This data suggests that BPC157, a gut peptide, influences brain 5-HT synthesis in rats, but we cannot determine, from this data, the mechanism of this action.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-12-03T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.lfs.2004.08.010