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DSIP

Emideltide, DSIP nonapeptide, Delta sleep-inducing peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 458
Trials 82
Score 2
1990 pubmed

Immunohistochemical mapping of delta sleep-inducing peptide in the cat brain and hypophysis. Relationships with the LHRH system and corticotropes.

Charnay. Y Y; Léger. L L; Golaz. J J; Sallanon. M M; Vallet. P G PG; Guntern. R R; Bouras. C C; Constantinidis. J J; Jouvet. M M; Tissot. R R

Key Findings

  • DSIP‑like cells are scattered in hypothalamic areas such as the diagonal band of Broca, ventral septum, and anterior hypothalamus.
  • DSIP frequently co‑exists with luteinizing hormone‑releasing hormone (LHRH) neurons, suggesting a link between sleep peptide and reproductive hormone regulation.
  • Most melanocorticotropes and many corticotropes in the pituitary contain DSIP, indicating a possible role in stress‑axis hormone control.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study hints that DSIP could influence hormone systems that affect sleep, stress, and reproduction, but it doesn’t provide dosing or protocol guidance. For biohackers, the takeaway is that DSIP’s effects may go beyond simple sleep promotion, potentially impacting stress hormones, yet more functional research is needed before practical applications.

Summary

Researchers mapped where the delta sleep‑inducing peptide (DSIP) lives in the cat brain and pituitary gland. They found DSIP‑like cells in several hypothalamic regions, often together with the hormone‑releasing hormone that controls reproduction (LHRH). In the pituitary, DSIP showed up in cells that make stress‑related hormones (ACTH) and pigment‑related hormones.

Abstract

Using the indirect immunofluorescence method, the distribution of the delta sleep-inducing peptide was studied in the cat brain and hypophysis. Delta sleep-inducing peptide-like-immunoreactive cell bodies mostly visualized in colchicine-pretreated animals were mainly found scattered throughout the diagonal band of Broca, the ventral septum and the anterior hypothalamic areas. A few immunoreactive cell somata were also seen in the ventrolateral hypothalamic area and more occasionally in the triangular septal nucleus. The heaviest concentrations of delta sleep-inducing peptide-like-immunoreactive varicose fibres and terminal-like structures were observed in the septo-preoptic region, in the median eminence and pituitary stalk. Some other brain regions supplied with few delta sleep-inducing peptide-immunoreactive fibres included the fimbria-fornix, the dorsal part of the subfornical organ, the medial habenular nucleus and more caudally, the periaqueductal gray. Elution-restaining experiments revealed that delta sleep-inducing peptide-like immunoreactivity frequently occurred in luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone-immunoreactive neurons and vice versa. At the pituitary level, delta sleep-inducing peptide-like immunoreactivity was detected in most, if not all, melanocorticotropes of the pars intermedia and further in a large subpopulation of corticotropes mainly located in the zona tuberalis of the pars distalis. Taken together these anatomical findings support the view that delta sleep-inducing peptide (or a closely related molecular form) could play a modulatory role at various levels of the hypothalamo-pituitary system.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1990