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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
2013 pubmed 58 citations

Oral 'hydrogen water' induces neuroprotective ghrelin secretion in mice.

Matsumoto. Akio A; Yamafuji. Megumi M; Tachibana. Tomoko T; Nakabeppu. Yusaku Y; Noda. Mami M; Nakaya. Haruaki H

Key Findings

  • Hydrogen‑rich drinking water increases gastric ghrelin mRNA and circulating ghrelin levels in mice.
  • s disease mouse model is lost when the ghrelin receptor is blocked with D‑Lys(3) GHRP‑6 or when β1‑adrenergic signaling is inhibited.",

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, hydrogen‑rich water could be explored as a low‑risk way to raise ghrelin, which may support brain health and longevity. However, the evidence is limited to mice, so any protocol should be experimental, start with modest doses, and be combined with other proven ghrelin‑boosting strategies (e.g., fasting, GHRP‑6 peptides).

Summary

A study in mice found that drinking water enriched with molecular hydrogen (hydrogen water) raises the stomach's production of ghrelin, a hormone that can protect brain cells. The neuroprotective effect seen in a Parkinson's disease model disappeared when the ghrelin receptor was blocked, showing that the benefit depends on ghrelin. This suggests hydrogen water might be a simple way to boost ghrelin, but the findings are still early and only in animals.

Abstract

The therapeutic potential of molecular hydrogen (H₂) is emerging in a number of human diseases and in their animal models, including in particular Parkinson's disease (PD). H₂ supplementation of drinking water has been shown to exert disease-modifying effects in PD patients and neuroprotective effects in experimental PD model mice. However, H₂ supplementation does not result in detectable changes in striatal H₂ levels, indicating an indirect effect. Here we show that H₂ supplementation increases gastric expression of mRNA encoding ghrelin, a growth hormone secretagogue, and ghrelin secretion, which are antagonized by the β1-adrenoceptor blocker, atenolol. Strikingly, the neuroprotective effect of H₂ water was abolished by either administration of the ghrelin receptor-antagonist, D-Lys(3) GHRP-6, or atenolol. Thus, the neuroprotective effect of H₂ in PD is mediated by enhanced production of ghrelin. Our findings point to potential, novel strategies for ameliorating pathophysiology in which a protective effect of H₂ supplementation has been demonstrated.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-11-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/srep03273

Citations

58

References

53