Neither intravenous nor intracerebroventricular administration of obestatin affects the secretion of GH, PRL, TSH and ACTH in rats.
Yamamoto. Daisuke D; Ikeshita. Nobuko N; Daito. Rie R; Herningtyas. Elizabeth Henny EH; Toda. Keizo K; Takahashi. Kentaro K; Iida. Keiji K; Takahashi. Yutaka Y; Kaji. Hidesuke H; Chihara. Kazuo K; Okimura. Yasuhiko Y
Key Findings
- Intravenous obestatin did not alter plasma GH, PRL, ACTH, or TSH levels in anesthetized male rats.
- Obestatin did not modify the GH surge caused by GHRH or GHRP‑2 administration.
- Intracerebroventricular (brain) injection of obestatin also failed to affect GH, PRL, ACTH, or TSH secretion.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers looking to boost growth hormone or other pituitary hormones, obestatin offers no benefit and can be omitted from protocols. Stick with proven agents like GHRP‑2, GHRH, or other GH‑releasing strategies. This study also reassures that using obestatin is unlikely to cause unexpected hormone spikes.
Summary
In rats, giving the peptide obestatin—whether directly into the bloodstream or straight into the brain—did not change the levels of growth hormone, prolactin, ACTH, or TSH. It also didn’t affect the big rise in growth hormone that normally happens when you give GHRH or the ghrelin‑mimic GHRP‑2. So, despite having a known receptor in the pituitary, obestatin appears inactive for these hormone releases.
Abstract
To examine the effect of obestatin, a recently identified peptide derived from preproghrelin, on pituitary hormone secretion, obestatin was administered in anesthetized male rats. Intravenous administration of obestatin did not show any effect on plasma GH, PRL, ACTH and TSH levels. Since obestatin has been reported to have opposite effects of ghrelin in regulating food intake, gastric emptying and intestinal contractility, GH suppressive effect, which is opposite effect of ghrelin, was tested. Intravenous administration of GHRH or GHRP-2, a ghrelin receptor ligand, resulted in a marked plasma GH elevation. However obestatin did not show any effect on GHRH- or GHRP-2-induced GH rise. Furthermore intracerebroventricular administration of obestatin also did not influence plasma GH, PRL, ACTH and TSH levels. These findings suggest that obestatin has no effect on pituitary hormone secretions despite the presence of GPR39, a receptor for obestatin, in the pituitary.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-10-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.regpep.2006.09.001
97
10