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DSIP

Emideltide, DSIP nonapeptide, Delta sleep-inducing peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 458
Trials 82
Score 1
1989 pubmed 14 citations

Delta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP)-like immunoreactivity in gut: coexistence with known peptide hormones.

Bjartell. A A; Ekman. R R; Hedenbro. J J; Sjölund. K K; Sundler. F F

Key Findings

  • DSIP‑like immunoreactivity is located in gut endocrine cells that produce gastrin/CCK, secretin, and PYY/glicentin.
  • Human gut tissue contains the highest levels of DSIP‑like material among the species tested (human, pig, rat).
  • High‑performance liquid chromatography shows a single DSIP‑like peak matching the known DSIP 3‑9 fragment.

Practical Outcomes

  • At present this discovery doesn’t translate into a direct health protocol. It simply tells biohackers that DSIP is naturally made in the gut, but there’s no evidence yet on how to boost it, what doses might work, or what effects it has on sleep, metabolism, or performance.

Summary

Scientists found that a peptide called delta sleep‑inducing peptide (DSIP) or a very similar molecule is naturally present in human gut cells that release hormones like gastrin, CCK, secretin, and PYY. The human gut had the most of this peptide compared to pig or rat guts, and the chemical looks the same as a known fragment of DSIP.

Abstract

Delta sleep-inducing peptide-like immunoreactivity (DSIP-LI) has previously been demonstrated in brain neurons and in endocrine cells of the pituitary and the adrenal medulla. By means of three different antisera against synthetic DSIP we now describe the occurrence and distribution of DSIP-LI in several gut endocrine cells. The human gut was the richest source, where DSIP-LI was located in gastrin/CCK, secretin and PYY/glicentin cells. The rat and pig gut harbour a moderate number of immunoreactive cells in the antral mucosa but in the intestines DSIP-LI-containing cells were very few. By radioimmunoassay, the concentration of DSIP-LI was determined in extracts of various gut regions from man, pig and rat. The highest concentrations were found in all human specimens compared with corresponding samples in the pig and rat. In all three species, high-performance liquid chromatography revealed a single peak of DSIP-like material with approximately the same retention time as DSIP 3-9. Taken together, the present results provide evidence for the presence of DSIP-LI in gut endocrine cells in man, pig and rat; the human gut seems to be the richest source of DSIP-like peptides.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1989

Date

1989-02-28T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/0196-9781(89)90093-4

Citations

14

References

28