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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 2
2018 pubmed 3 citations

The ghrelin paradox in the control of equine chondrocyte function: The good and the bad.

Ceriotti. Serena S; Consiglio. Anna Lange AL; Casati. Lavinia L; Cremonesi. Fausto F; Sibilia. Valeria V; Ferrucci. Francesco F

Key Findings

  • High‑dose ghrelin (10⁻⁷ M) protects chondrocytes from LPS‑induced necrosis and apoptosis via the GHS‑R1a receptor.
  • Low concentrations of ghrelin and des‑acyl ghrelin reduce cell viability and worsen inflammatory damage.
  • Blocking GHS‑R1a with D‑Lys3‑GHRP‑6 significantly reduces ghrelin’s protective effect, confirming the receptor’s role.

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑experimenters, the study hints that strong activation of GHS‑R1a might help joint health, but low‑dose ghrelin could be harmful. It suggests that any protocol using ghrelin or GHS‑R1a agonists for anti‑inflammatory purposes should aim for higher, well‑controlled doses and consider local (joint‑specific) delivery. More human data are needed before applying these findings to personal health regimens.

Summary

In a lab study using horse cartilage cells, researchers found that a relatively high dose of the hormone ghrelin can shield the cells from inflammation‑driven damage, but lower doses actually hurt the cells. The protective effect works through the GHS‑R1a receptor and disappears when a blocker (D‑Lys3‑GHRP‑6) is added. A related form of ghrelin that doesn’t bind this receptor (des‑acyl ghrelin) made the damage worse.

Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests a role for ghrelin in the control of articular inflammatory diseases like osteoarthritis (OA). In the present study we examined the ability of ghrelin to counteract LPS-induced necrosis and apoptosis of chondrocytes and the involvement of GH secretagogue receptor (GHS-R)1a in the protective action of ghrelin. The effects of ghrelin (10<sup>-7</sup>-10<sup>-11</sup>&#x202f;mol/L) on equine primary cultured chondrocytes viability and necrosis in basal conditions and under LPS treatment (100&#x202f;ng/ml) were detected by using both acridine orange/propidium iodide staining and annexin-5/propidium iodide staining. The presence of GHS-R1a on chondrocytes was detected by Western Blot. The involvement of the GHS-R1a in the ghrelin effect against LPS-induced cytotoxicity was examined by pretreating chondrocytes with D-Lys3-GHRP-6, a specific GHS-R1a antagonist, and by using des-acyl ghrelin (DAG, 10<sup>-7</sup> and 10<sup>-9</sup>&#x202f;mol/L) which did not recognize the GHS-R 1a. Low ghrelin concentrations reduced chondrocyte viability whereas 10<sup>-7</sup>&#x202f;mol/L ghrelin protects against LPS-induced cellular damage. The protective effect of ghrelin depends on the interaction with the GHS-R1a since it is significantly reduced by D-Lys3-GHRP-6. The negative action of ghrelin involves caspase activation and could be due to an interaction with a GHS-R type different from the GHS-R1a recognized by both low ghrelin concentrations and DAG. DAG, in fact, induces a dose-dependent decrease in chondrocyte viability and exacerbates LPS-induced damage. These data indicate that ghrelin protects chondrocytes against LPS-induced damage via interaction with GHS-R1a and suggest the potential utility of local GHS-R1a agonist administration to treat articular inflammatory diseases such as OA.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-03-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.peptides.2018.03.003

Citations

3

References

60