GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Comparative proteomic analysis of growth hormone secretagogue A233 treatment of murine macrophage cells J774A.2 indicates it has a role in antiviral innate response.
Martínez. Rebeca R; de Villavicencio-Díaz. Teresa Núñez TN; Sánchez. Aniel A; Ramos. Yassel Y; Ferro. Jesús Noda JN; González. Lázaro Gil LG; Méndez. Milagros M; Rodríguez. Elsa E; Marcos. Ernesto E; Sánchez. Belinda B; Masforrol. Yordanka Y; Garay. Hilda H; Albericio. Fernando F; Hermida. Lisset L; González. Luis Javier LJ; Vonasek. Eva E; Estrada. Mario P MP; Besada. Vladimir V
Key Findings
- A233 peptide stimulates macrophage activation and ROS‑dependent cytotoxic functions.
- Treatment raises IFN‑γ levels in mouse immune cells.
- A233 reduces dengue virus load in infected mice, likely via enhanced antiviral protein complexes such as MAVS.
Practical Outcomes
- The results suggest A233 might have immune‑boosting and antiviral effects, but the evidence is limited to cell cultures and mice. There is no guidance on safe human dosing, side‑effects, or long‑term use, so it isn’t ready for self‑experimentation or protocol development at this time.
Summary
A study in mouse immune cells found that the growth‑hormone secretagogue peptide A233 (similar to GHRP‑6) can turn on immune cells, boost reactive‑oxygen‑species and interferon‑γ, and lower dengue virus levels in a mouse infection model. The work is still in animals and does not give dosing or safety info for people.
Abstract
Growth hormone secretagogues (GHS), among other factors, regulate the release of GH. The biological activity of the secretagogue peptide A233 as a promoter of growth and innate immunity in teleost fish has previously been demonstrated, but its role in the immune system of mammals is not well understood. The effect of the peptide was investigated in J774A.2 macrophage cells using a comparative proteomics approach after 6 and 12 h of peptide stimulation. The functional analysis of differentially modulated proteins showed that A233 peptide treatment appears to promote activation and ROS-dependent cytotoxic functions in macrophages and enhanced expression of antiviral protein complexes such as MAVS. In accordance with this hypothesis, we found that A233 treatment enhanced superoxide anion production and the IFN-γ level in J774A.2 cells and mouse splenocytes, respectively, and reduced viral load in a dengue virus mouse model of infection. The growth hormone secretagogue A233 peptide promotes activation of ROS-dependent cytotoxic functions and exerts immunomodulatory effects that enable an antiviral state in a dengue virus mouse model. The increase of IFN-γ level and the differential modulation of antiviral proteins by the A233 peptide suggest that the molecule could activate an innate immune response with a possible further impact in the treatment of acute and chronic diseases.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-01-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbrep.2016.01.008
10
39