GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Ghrelin counteracts insulin-induced activation of vagal afferent neurons via growth hormone secretagogue receptor.
Iwasaki. Yusaku Y; Dezaki. Katsuya K; Kumari. Parmila P; Kakei. Masafumi M; Yada. Toshihiko T
Key Findings
- Insulin directly raises calcium activity in vagal afferent neurons, indicating activation.
- Ghrelin at low concentrations suppresses this insulin‑induced activation via the GHS‑R receptor.
- The ghrelin effect is specific to insulin signaling and is blocked by a GHS‑R antagonist, with des‑acyl ghrelin and CCK showing no similar inhibition.
Practical Outcomes
- GHRP‑6 or other ghrelin agonists might be used to blunt insulin‑driven signals to the brain, possibly altering appetite or post‑meal glucose handling. Timing a ghrelin‑mimetic dose before or around meals could modulate satiety cues, but human studies are needed and safety/efficacy are not yet proven.
Summary
The study shows that the hormone ghrelin can block insulin’s direct activation of gut‑brain nerve cells (vagal afferents) through the GHS‑R receptor, while not affecting other hormones like CCK. This suggests that ghrelin (or drugs that mimic it, like GHRP‑6) may influence how the brain perceives insulin signals after eating, potentially affecting hunger and metabolism.
Abstract
Vagal afferent nerves sense meal-related gastrointestinal and pancreatic hormones and convey their information to the brain, thereby regulating brain functions including feeding. We have recently demonstrated that postprandial insulin directly acts on the vagal afferent neurons. Plasma concentrations of orexigenic ghrelin and anorexigenic insulin show reciprocal dynamics before and after meals. The present study examined interactive effects of ghrelin and insulin on vagal afferent nerves. Cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)]i) in isolated nodose ganglion (NG) neurons was measured to monitor their activity. Insulin at 10(-7)M increased [Ca(2+)]i in NG neurons, and the insulin-induced [Ca(2+)]i increase was inhibited by treatment with ghrelin at 10(-8)M. This inhibitory effect of ghrelin was attenuated by [D-Lys(3)]-GHRP-6, an antagonist of growth hormone-secretagogue receptor (GHSR). Des-acyl ghrelin had little effect on insulin-induced [Ca(2+)]i increases in NG neurons. Ghrelin did not affect [Ca(2+)]i increases in response to cholecystokinin (CCK), a hormone that inhibits feeding via vagal afferent neurons, indicating that ghrelin selectively counteracts the insulin action. These results demonstrate that ghrelin via GHSR suppresses insulin-induced activation of NG neurons. The action of ghrelin to counteract insulin effects on NG might serve to efficiently inform the brain of the systemic change between fasting-associated ghrelin-dominant and fed-associated insulin-dominant states for the homeostatic central regulation of feeding and metabolism.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-06-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.npep.2015.06.003
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