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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
2013 pubmed 39 citations

Ghrelin modulates lateral amygdala neuronal firing and blocks acquisition for conditioned taste aversion.

Song. Lige L; Zhu. Qianqian Q; Liu. Tianwei T; Yu. Ming M; Xiao. Kewei K; Kong. Qingnuan Q; Zhao. Renliang R; Li. Guo-Dong GD; Zhou. Yu Y

Key Findings

  • Ghrelin at nanomolar concentrations boosts spontaneous firing of lateral amygdala neurons in rats.
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Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers using GHRP‑6 or other ghrelin‑activating compounds, the research hints that high levels of ghrelin could influence emotional memory formation, potentially dampening the learning of negative experiences. However, because the effect was seen with direct brain infusion, it is unlikely to translate directly to typical peripheral dosing. Still, it suggests monitoring for subtle mood or memory changes when using strong ghrelin agonists.

Summary

The study shows that ghrelin, the hormone that stimulates hunger, can directly increase the activity of neurons in the brain's lateral amygdala and, when injected there, it blocks the learning of a bad taste. This effect is stopped by a drug that blocks the ghrelin receptor (GHS‑R1a), such as D‑Lys3‑GHRP‑6. The findings suggest that ghrelin signaling in the amygdala plays a role in how we form aversive memories, but the experiments used direct brain injections, not the usual oral or injectable doses used by most people.

Abstract

Ghrelin is an orexigenic brain-gut hormone promoting feeding and regulating energy metabolism in human and rodents. An increasing number of studies have reported that ghrelin and its identified receptor, the growth hormone secretagogue receptor 1a (GHS-R1a), produces remarkably wide and complex functions and biological effects on specific populations of neurons in central nervous system. In this study, we sought to explore the in vivo effects of acute ghrelin exposure on lateral amygdala (LA) neurons at the physiological and behavioral levels. In vivo extracellular single-unit recordings showed that ghrelin with the concentration of several nanomolars (nM) stimulated spontaneous firing of the LA neurons, an effect that was dose-dependent and could be blocked by co-application of a GHS-R1a antagonist D-Lys3-GHRP-6. We also found that D-Lys3-GHRP-6 inhibited spontaneous firing of the LA neurons in a dose-dependent manner, revealing that tonic GHS-R1a activity contributes to orchestrate the basal activity of the LA neurons. Behaviorally, we found that microinfusion of ghrelin (12 ng) into LA before training interfered with the acquisition of conditioned taste aversion (CTA) as tested at 24 h after conditioning. Pre-treatment with either purified IgG against GHS-R1a or GHS-R1a antagonist blocked ghrelin's effect on CTA memory acquisition. Ghrelin (12 ng) had no effect on CTA memory consolidation or the expression of acquired CTA memory; neither did it affect the total liquid consumption of tested rats. Altogether, our data indicated that ghrelin locally infused into LA blocks acquisition of CTA and its modulation effects on neuronal firing may be involved in this process.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-06-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0065422

Citations

39

References

64