The antidepressant effect of an antiulcer pentadecapeptide BPC 157 in Porsolt's test and chronic unpredictable stress in rats. A comparison with antidepressants.
Sikiric. P P; Separovic. J J; Buljat. G G; Anic. T T; Stancic-Rokotov. D D; Mikus. D D; Marovic. A A; Prkacin. I I; Duplancic. B B; Zoricic. I I; Aralica. G G; Lovric-Bencic. M M; Ziger. T T; Perovic. D D; Rotkvic. I I; Mise. S S; Hanzevacki. M M; Hahn. V V; Seiwerth. S S; Turkovic. B B; Grabarevic. Z Z; Petek. M M; Rucman. R R
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 (10 µg/kg i.p.) reduced immobility in the forced‑swim test, matching the effect of high‑dose imipramine or nialamide.
- In a chronic unpredictable stress model, BPC‑157 remained effective after both 4 and 6 days of treatment, unlike imipramine which only showed benefit after a longer period.
- The peptide’s antidepressant‑like activity appeared without the delay typically seen with conventional antidepressants.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this suggests BPC‑157 might have mood‑lifting properties that work faster than some classic antidepressants, at least in animal models. However, human data are lacking, so any self‑experiment should be approached cautiously, starting with low doses and monitoring for side effects. The study does not provide a human dosing protocol, but it highlights the peptide’s potential as a rapid‑acting mood enhancer worth watching for future clinical trials.
Summary
In rats, the stomach peptide BPC‑157 acted like an antidepressant, cutting the time the animals stayed immobile in forced‑swim tests. It worked as well as standard drugs such as imipramine, but showed effects faster—within 4‑6 days of daily dosing—while the traditional drug needed longer exposure. The benefit persisted even when the stress model got tougher, where the usual drugs lost some effectiveness.
Abstract
Various antidepressants have antiulcer activity. Likewise, the models currently used in ulcers and depression disorders research have a considerable degree of similarity. Therefore, the possibility that depression disorders could be effectively influenced by a primary antiulcer agent with a cyto/organoprotective activity, such as the novel stomach pentadecapeptide BPC 157, was investigated in two rat depression assays. First, a forced swimming test (a Porsolt's procedure) was used. As a more severe procedure, chronic unpredictable stress (after 5 d of unpredictable stress protocol, once daily drug application during stress procedure, open field-immobility test assessment at fourth or sixth day of medication) was used. In a forced swimming test, a reduction of the immobility time in BPC 157 (10 microg, 10 ng x kg(-1) i.p.) treated rats corresponds to the activity of the 15 mg or 40 mg (i.p.) of conventional antidepressants, imipramine or nialamide, respectively, given according to the original Porsolt's protocol. In chronic unpredictable stress procedure, particular aggravation of experimental conditions markedly affected the conventional antidepressant activity, whereas BPC 157 effectiveness was continuously present. The effect of daily imipramine (30 mg) medication could be seen only after a more prolonged period, but not after a shorter period (i.e., 4-d protocol). In these conditions, no delay in the effectiveness was noted in BPC 157 medication and a reduction of the immobility of chronically stressed rats was noted after both 4 and 6 d of BPC 157 (10 microg, 10 ng) medication.
Study Information
pubmed
2000
10.1016/s0928-4257(00)00148-0