Comparison of DSIP- (delta sleep-inducing peptide) and P-DSIP-like (phosphorylated) immunoreactivity in cerebrospinal fluid of patients with senile dementia of Alzheimer type, multi-infarct syndrome, communicating hydrocephalus and Parkinson's disease.
Ernst. A A; Cramer. H H; Strubel. D D; Kuntzmann. F F; Schoenenberger. G A GA
Key Findings
- Regular DSIP levels rise with age in healthy people.
- Patients with neurodegenerative or vascular brain conditions have lower regular DSIP than age‑matched controls.
- Phosphorylated DSIP levels stay the same across diseases and ages.
Practical Outcomes
- For now, the findings are mostly scientific and don't suggest a new supplement or treatment plan. They hint that DSIP might be a marker of brain health, but biohackers don't have actionable steps to use this information yet.
Summary
The study measured two forms of a brain peptide called DSIP in spinal fluid. Healthy older people had higher levels of the regular form, while people with Alzheimer's, other dementias, Parkinson's, vascular disease, or hydrocephalus had lower levels. The phosphorylated version didn't change with disease.
Abstract
The concentrations of delta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP)-like (DSIP-LI) and P-DSIP-like (phosphorylated, Ser7) immunoreactivity (P-DSIP-LI) were measured by specific radioimmunoassay in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with senile dementia of the Alzheimer type [SDAT, subdivided into early (S1), middle (S2) and late dementia (S3)], multi-infarct dementia (MD), Parkinson's disease (PD), vascular disease (VD) and communicating hydrocephalus (H), as well as in control patients (C1, C2). Mean DSIP-LI and P-DSIP-LI concentrations were found to be significantly higher in the elderly control group (C1, mean age 83 +/- 5 years) than in the middle-aged control group (C2, mean age 40 +/- 16 years). DSIP-LI and P-DSIP-LI were positively correlated with age in both control groups. Significant decreases of DSIP-LI compared with age-matched controls (C1) were observed for S2, S3, MD, PD, VD and H. In contrast, no significant differences corresponding to pathology were found for P-DSIP-LI.
Study Information
pubmed
1987
10.1007/bf00314191