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BPC-157

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

Quick Stats
Studies 196
Trials 1
Score 3
2001 pubmed

Therapy effect of antiulcer agents on new chronic cysteamine colon lesion in rat.

Sikiric. P P; Seiwerth. S S; Aralica. G G; Perovic. D D; Staresinic. M M; Anic. T T; Gjurasin. M M; Prkacin. I I; Separovic. J J; Stancic-Rokotov. D D; Lovric-Bencic. M M; Mikus. D D; Turkovic. B B; Rotkvic. I I; Mise. S S; Rucman. R R; Petek. M M; Ziger. T T; Sebecic. B B; Ivasovic. Z Z; Jagic. V V; Komericki. L L; Balen. I I; Boban-Blagaic. A A; Sjekavica. I I

Key Findings

  • BPC‑157 (10 µg or 10 ng/kg) markedly reduced chronic cysteamine‑induced colon lesions in female rats.
  • The peptide was effective when given orally, intraperitoneally, or intrarectally, and worked as well as ranitidine, omeprazole, atropine, methylprednisolone, and sulphasalazine.
  • After stopping therapy, lesions re‑appeared in the sulphasalazine group but remained low in the BPC‑157‑treated rats, indicating a lasting protective effect.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers interested in gut health, this study suggests BPC‑157 could be a promising oral or rectal supplement for ulcer healing and relapse prevention. However, the data are from rats and use very low doses, so human dosing and safety still need research before real‑world protocols can be recommended.

Summary

In rats, the peptide BPC‑157 helped heal and keep healed severe colon ulcers caused by a chemical called cysteamine. It worked as well as, or better than, common ulcer medicines and stopped the ulcers from coming back after treatment stopped.

Abstract

After demonstration that cysteamine induced duodenal lesions in gastrectomized rats, while a number of antiulcer drugs mitigated these lesions, it was shown that one single intrarectal (i.r.) cysteamine application produced severe colon lesions in acute studies in rats. Thus, the further focus was on the protracted effect of cysteamine challenge (400 mg/kg b.w. i.r.) and therapy influence in chronic experiments in female rats. Regularly, cysteamine colon lesions were markedly mitigated by ranitidine (10), omeprazole (10), atropine (10), methylprednisolone (1), sulphasalazine (50; mg/kg), pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (PL-10, PLD-116; 10 microg or 10 ng/kg). Specifically, after 1 or 3 months following initial challenge (cysteamine 400 mg/kg i.r.) in female rat, the therapy [BPC 157 (PL-10, PLD-116 (10.0 microg or 10.0 ng/kg; i.g., i.p., i.r.), ranitidine, omeprazole, atropine, methylprednisolone, sulphasalazine (i.p.)] reversed the protracted cysteamine colon injury: the 1 week-regimen (once daily application) started after 1 month post-cysteamine, as well as the 2 weeks-regimen (once daily application), which started after 3 months. The effect on recidive lesion was also tested. These cysteamine lesions may reappear after stopping therapy (after stopping therapy for 3 weeks at the end of 2-weeks regimen started in 3 months-cysteamine female rats) in sulphasalazine group, while this reappearance is markedly antagonized in pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (PL-10, PLD-116)-rats (cysteamine-colon lesion still substantially low).

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2001

DOI

10.1016/s0928-4257(01)00039-0