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GHRP-2

Pralmorelin, Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-2, KP-102

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 2
2004 pubmed 24 citations

Regulation of ghrelin gene expression in stomach and feeding response to a ghrelin analogue in two strains of rats.

Liu. Xiaotuan X; York. David A DA; Bray. George A GA

Key Findings

  • GHRP‑2 increased intake of the preferred macronutrient (low‑fat or high‑fat) in satiated rats, but not in fasted rats.
  • The obesity‑prone rat strain (OM) showed a large rise in stomach ghrelin mRNA after fasting, unlike the obesity‑resistant strain (S5B).
  • Plasma total ghrelin levels were similar between strains, suggesting tissue‑specific regulation matters.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this suggests that ghrelin‑mimicking peptides may boost cravings for the type of food you already favor, especially when you’re not hungry. However, the effect appears strain‑specific in rats and may not translate directly to humans, so using GHRP‑2 to manipulate macronutrient intake remains experimental and should be approached with caution.

Summary

In two types of rats, a ghrelin‑like peptide called GHRP‑2 made hungry (satiated) rats eat more of the food they normally prefer – low‑fat food in one strain and high‑fat food in the other. When the rats were already fasting, the peptide didn’t boost eating. The study also showed that the rats that tend to get fat on a high‑fat diet have higher stomach ghrelin gene activity after fasting, while the resistant rats do not.

Abstract

Ghrelin is a peptide produced by the stomach and released into the circulation. As a natural ligand of the growth hormone secretagogue (GHS) receptor, it stimulates growth hormone secretion but it also stimulates feeding in humans and rodents. The orexigenic effect of ghrelin has been related to AgRP/NPY and orexin pathways. We proposed that ghrelin might be involved in the susceptibility to diet induced obesity and in the regulation of macronutrient selection. We have investigated these hypotheses in two strains of rat, the Osborne-Mendel (OM) rat that prefers diets high in fat and is sensitive to dietary obesity and the S5B/P1 (S5B) rat that prefers a low fat diet and is resistant to high fat diet induced obesity. OM and S5B rats were adapted to a choice of high fat (HF) and low fat (LF) diet for 2 weeks. GHRP-2, an analogue of ghrelin, was injected intraperitoneally into satiated and 24 h fasted rats at doses of 10, 30 and 90 nmol. Food intake was measured over the next 4 h period. In satiated S5B rats, GHRP-2 stimulated intake of the LF diet in a dose dependent manner but did not affect the intake of the HF diet. In satiated OM rats, 90 nmol of GHRP-2 stimulated HF intake. In contrast, neither fasted OM nor S5B rats increased the intake of either HF or LF diet in response to GHRP-2. Fasting for 18 h induced a large rise in ghrelin mRNA in stomach of OM rats but not in S5B rats. There were no significant differences in plasma total ghrelin. An increase in ghrelin mRNA in stomach immediately before the onset of the dark cycle was observed in OM but not in S5B rats. Active ghrelin level was significantly affected by different feeding conditions in both OM and S5B rats adapted on HF diet with a trend to increase after 48 h of fasting and to decline to basal levels following 10 h of refeeding. These data suggest that ghrelin stimulates the intake of the preferred macronutrient. In addition, a differential regulation of ghrelin gene expression between OM and S5B rats may be important in their differential sensitivity to HF diet-induced obesity.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2004

Date

2004-12-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.peptides.2004.08.020

Citations

24

References

32