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GHRP-6

Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2

Quick Stats
Studies 702
Trials 0
Score 3
2015 pubmed 27 citations

Acute food deprivation enhances fear extinction but inhibits long-term depression in the lateral amygdala via ghrelin signaling.

Huang. Chiung-Chun CC; Chou. Dylan D; Yeh. Che-Ming CM; Hsu. Kuei-Sen KS

Key Findings

  • Food deprivation raises plasma acylated ghrelin and improves fear extinction and its retention in mice.
  • Blocking the ghrelin receptor with D‑Lys(3)‑GHRP‑6 prevents the fasting‑induced enhancement of fear extinction.
  • Elevated ghrelin (or fasting) selectively impairs PP‑LFS‑ and DHPG‑induced LTD at thalamic‑amygdala synapses, while LFS‑induced LTD remains intact.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, short‑term fasting may help reduce fear‑related memories or anxiety by boosting ghrelin signaling, but it could also interfere with certain brain plasticity processes. If you’re using ghrelin‑mimicking peptides (like GHRP‑6) for mood or cognition, be aware they might blunt some forms of synaptic weakening, which could affect learning flexibility. Timing fasting or peptide use around emotional‑training protocols could be a way to harness the benefit while minimizing potential downsides.

Summary

Skipping meals raises the hormone ghrelin, which makes mice better at unlearning fear (fear extinction) but also blocks some types of synaptic weakening in the amygdala. Blocking ghrelin receptors stops the fear‑extinction boost, showing ghrelin is the key player. The effect is specific: it only blocks certain forms of long‑term depression, not all.

Abstract

Fear memory-encoding thalamic input synapses to the lateral amygdala (T-LA) exhibit dynamic efficacy changes that are tightly correlated with fear memory strength. Previous studies have shown that auditory fear conditioning involves strengthening of synaptic strength, and conversely, fear extinction training leads to T-LA synaptic weakening and occlusion of long-term depression (LTD) induction. These findings suggest that the mechanisms governing LTD at T-LA synapses may determine the behavioral outcomes of extinction training. Here, we explored this hypothesis by implementing food deprivation (FD) stress in mice to determine its effects on fear extinction and LTD induction at T-LA synapses. We found that FD increased plasma acylated ghrelin levels and enhanced fear extinction and its retention. Augmentation of fear extinction by FD was blocked by pretreatment with growth hormone secretagogue receptor type-1a antagonist D-Lys(3)-GHRP-6, suggesting an involvement of ghrelin signaling. Confirming previous findings, two distinct forms of LTD coexist at thalamic inputs to LA pyramidal neurons that can be induced by low-frequency stimulation (LFS) or paired-pulse LFS (PP-LFS) paired with postsynaptic depolarization, respectively. Unexpectedly, we found that FD impaired the induction of PP-LFS- and group I metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist (S)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine (DHPG)-induced LTD, but not LFS-induced LTD. Ghrelin mimicked the effects of FD to impair the induction of PP-LFS- and DHPG-induced LTD at T-LA synapses, which were blocked by co-application of D-Lys(3)-GHRP-6. The sensitivity of synaptic transmission to 1-naphthyl acetyl spermine was not altered by either FD or ghrelin treatment. These results highlight distinct features of fear extinction and LTD at T-LA synapses.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2015

Date

2015-09-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.neuropharm.2015.09.018

Citations

27

References

38