Characterization of a delta-electroencephalogram (-sleep)-inducing peptide.
Schoenenberger. G A GA; Monnier. M M
Key Findings
- DSIP (Trp‑Ala‑Gly‑Gly‑Asp‑Ala‑Ser‑Gly‑Glu) increased delta and spindle EEG activity when infused into rabbit brains.
- All tested analogues and shorter fragments failed to produce the same effect.
- The experiment was double‑blind, involved 58 rabbits, and used computer‑based Fourier analysis of brain waves.
Practical Outcomes
- Because DSIP only works when directly injected into the brain, it isn’t a practical supplement or therapy for most people. There’s no guidance on safe oral dosing, delivery methods, or human effects, so biohackers can’t readily apply this finding to improve sleep or performance.
Summary
Scientists found that a tiny brain‑injected peptide called DSIP can boost deep‑sleep brain waves (delta) and sleep spindles in rabbits, but none of the related or altered versions did anything. The study used a very invasive method (directly into the brain) and only showed the effect in animals under controlled lab conditions.
Abstract
A peptide that induces slow-wave (delta) and spindles electroencephalogram enhancement after intraventricular (brain) infusion has been isolated from rabbits and given the name delta-sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP). Amino acid seqeunce: Trp-Ala-Gly-Gly-Asp-Ala-Ser-Gly-Glu. This compound, five possible metabolic products (containing residues 1--8, 2--9, 2--8, 1--4, and 5--9), two nonapeptide analogues with two amino acids exchanged, and a related tripeptide (Trp-Ser-Glu) were synthesized. All nine synthetic peptides were infused intraventricularly in rabbits under double-blind conditions. A total of 58 rabbits including controls were evaluated. The electroencephalogram leads from the neocortex and the archicortex were directly fast-Fourier transformed and analyzed by a Univac 1108 computer system. Only the delta-sleep-inducing peptide (snythetic) showed significant and specific enhancement/induction of delta and spindle electroencephalogram patterns.
Study Information
pubmed
1977
10.1073/pnas.74.3.1282