Dihexa
N-(1-Oxohexyl)-L-tyrosyl-N-(6-amino-6-oxohexyl)-L-isoleucinamide, N-hexanoic-Tyr-Ile-(6) aminohexanoic amide, PNB-0408
Cognitive benefits of angiotensin IV and angiotensin-(1-7): A systematic review of experimental studies.
Ho. Jean K JK; Nation. Daniel A DA
Key Findings
- Ang IV improved performance on avoidance and object‑recognition tests in normal animals (7 of 11 studies).
- In models of cognitive deficit, Ang IV and analogs like dihexa enhanced spatial working memory and passive‑avoidance tasks (8 of 9 studies).
- Ang‑(1‑7) showed memory benefits in two out of three studies, and removing its receptor reduced fear memory.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the data suggest that Ang IV‑related peptides have real cognitive‑enhancing potential, but the current evidence is limited to invasive brain injections in rodents. No safe oral or nasal dosing protocol exists yet, so the findings are more a signal for future research than a ready‑to‑use supplement.
Summary
Animal studies show that the brain hormone Ang IV and its cousins (including the experimental peptide dihexa) can boost memory and learning in rats, especially when given right before a test. A similar brain peptide, Ang‑(1‑7), also helped memory in a few studies. However, the benefits were seen when the compounds were injected directly into the brain, which isn’t practical for everyday use.
Abstract
To explore effects of the brain renin-angiotensin system (RAS) on cognition. Systematic review of experimental (non-human) studies assessing cognitive effects of RAS peptides angiotensin-(3-8) [Ang IV] and angiotensin-(1-7) [Ang-(1-7)] and their receptors, the Ang IV receptor (AT4R) and the Mas receptor. Of 450 articles identified, 32 met inclusion criteria. Seven of 11 studies of normal animals found Ang IV had beneficial effects on tests of passive or conditioned avoidance and object recognition. In models of cognitive deficit, eight of nine studies found Ang IV and its analogs (Nle<sup>1</sup>-Ang IV, dihexa, LVV-hemorphin-7) improved performance on spatial working memory and passive avoidance tasks. Two of three studies examining Ang-(1-7) found it benefited memory. Mas receptor removal was associated with reduced fear memory in one study. Studies of cognitive impairment show salutary effects of acute administration of Ang IV and its analogs, as well as AT4R activation. Brain RAS peptides appear most effective administered intracerebroventricularly, close to the time of learning acquisition or retention testing. Ang-(1-7) shows anti-dementia qualities.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-05-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.neubiorev.2018.05.005
40
110