GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Growth hormone secretagogue receptor signalling affects high-fat intake independently of plasma levels of ghrelin and LEAP2, in a 4-day binge eating model.
Cornejo. María Paula MP; Castrogiovanni. Daniel D; Schiöth. Helgi B HB; Reynaldo. Mirta M; Marie. Jacky J; Fehrentz. Jean-Alain JA; Perello. Mario M
Key Findings
- Plasma levels of ghrelin and LEAP2 stay the same during a 4‑day high‑fat binge protocol in mice.
- Systemic (body‑wide) injection of ghrelin or LEAP2 does not alter high‑fat intake under these conditions.
- Central (brain) administration of compounds that block the constitutive activity of GHSR reduces binge‑like high‑fat intake, while central ghrelin or ghrelin‑evoked blockers have no effect.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, taking GHRP‑6 or other peripheral ghrelin‑related peptides is unlikely to curb binge eating, because the key effect comes from brain‑specific GHSR activity. Targeting this pathway would require central delivery methods that are not practical for most users, so the study mainly adds mechanistic insight rather than a new, usable protocol.
Summary
In mice that binge on high‑fat food, the amount of ghrelin or LEAP2 in the blood doesn't change, and giving these hormones by injection doesn't affect how much they eat. However, blocking the brain's GHSR receptor activity (the part that works even without ghrelin) does cut down binge eating, but only when the blocker is delivered directly into the brain. So the receptor matters, but the usual hormone tricks (like taking GHRP‑6) probably won't change binge eating in everyday use.
Abstract
The growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR) is a G protein-coupled receptor that is highly expressed in the central nervous system. GHSR acts as a receptor for ghrelin and for liver-expressed antimicrobial peptide 2 (LEAP2), which blocks ghrelin-evoked activity. GHSR also displays ligand-independent activity, including a high constitutive activity that signals in the absence of ghrelin and is reduced by LEAP2. GHSR activity modulates a variety of food intake-related behaviours, including binge eating. Previously, we reported that GHSR-deficient mice daily and time-limited exposed to a high-fat (HF) diet display an attenuated binge-like HF intake compared to wild-type mice. In the present study, we aimed to determine whether ligand-independent GHSR activity affects binge-like HF intake in a 4-day binge-like eating protocol. We found that plasma levels of ghrelin and LEAP2 were not modified in mice exposed to this binge-like eating protocol. Moreover, systemic administration of ghrelin or LEAP2 did not alter HF intake in our experimental conditions. Interestingly, we found that central administration of LEAP2 or K-(D-1-Nal)-FwLL-NH<sub>2</sub> , which are both blockers of constitutive GHSR activity, reduced binge-like HF intake, whereas central administration of ghrelin or the ghrelin-evoked GHSR activity blockers [D-Lys3]-GHRP-6 and JMV2959 did not modify binge-like HF intake. Taken together, current data indicate that GHSR activity in the brain affects binge-like HF intake in mice independently of plasma levels of ghrelin and LEAP2.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-10-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/jne.12785
52
88