GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Novel chimeric peptides based on endomorphins and ghrelin receptor antagonist produced supraspinal antinociceptive effects with reduced acute tolerance in mice.
Wu. Bing B; Cheng. Songxia S; Liu. Fuyan F; Wei. Jia J; Liu. Yongling Y; Qian. Teng T; Ding. Jiali J; Xu. Biao B; Wei. Jie J
Key Findings
- The chimeric peptides (EM‑1‑DLS and EM‑2‑DLS) bind preferentially to κ‑opioid receptors, weakly to μ‑opioid receptors, and also activate the ghrelin receptor.
- EM‑1‑DLS was about eight times more potent than the original EM‑1 peptide in a mouse tail‑withdrawal pain test.
- Tolerance to the pain‑relieving effect developed much slower for the chimeric peptides (2.33‑fold increase) compared with the parent endomorphin (5.19‑fold increase).
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study suggests that combining GHRP‑6 fragments with opioid peptides could yield stronger pain relief with reduced tolerance, but the findings are limited to mouse brain injections and are far from a usable human protocol. It’s an interesting proof‑of‑concept for designing safer analgesics, not a ready‑to‑use supplement or dosage guide.
Summary
Scientists created two new hybrid peptides that mix an endomorphin (a natural opioid) with a short piece of the GHRP‑6 molecule. In mice, these hybrids acted as pain‑killers when injected into the brain and produced strong, dose‑dependent relief with far less rapid tolerance than the plain endomorphins. The work shows the concept works, but it’s still early‑stage animal research.
Abstract
It is widely recognized that developing bi- or multifunctional opioid compounds could offer a valuable approach to pain management with fewer side effects compared to single-target compounds. In this study, we designed and characterized two novel chimeric peptides, EM-1-DLS and EM-2-DLS, incorporating endomorphins (EMs) and the ghrelin receptor antagonist [D-Lys3]-GHRP-6 (DLS). Functional assays demonstrated that EM-1-DLS and EM-2-DLS acted as κ-opioid receptor (κ-OR)-preferring agonists, weak μ-opioid receptors (μ-OR) and ghrelin receptor (GHSR) agonists. Upon intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) administration in mice, both EM-1-DLS and EM-2-DLS exhibited dose- and time-dependent antinociceptive effects in the tail withdrawal test. EM-1-DLS demonstrated the highest antinociceptive potency among the peptides, with an ED<sub>50</sub> approximately 8-fold greater than EM-1, while EM-2-DLS showed comparable effects to EM-2. The antinociceptive actions of EM-1-DLS involved activation of GHS-R1α, μ-OR, and κ-OR, whereas EM-2-DLS acted via GHS-R1α, δ-OR, and κ-OR pathways. Additionally, acute antinociceptive tolerance was investigated, revealing that EM-1-DLS induced a tolerance ratio of 2.33-fold, significantly lower than the 5.19-fold ratio induced by EM-1. Cross-tolerance ratios between the chimeric peptides and EMs ranged from 0.92 to 1.76, indicating reduced tolerance compared to EMs alone. These findings highlight the potential of these chimeric peptides to mitigate pain with diminished tolerance development, suggesting a promising strategy for the development of new analgesic therapies with improved safety profiles.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-08-13T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.biochi.2024.08.010
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