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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
2012 pubmed 28 citations

Food restriction, ghrelin, its antagonist and obestatin control expression of ghrelin and its receptor in chicken hypothalamus and ovary.

Sirotkin. Alexander V AV; Pavlova. Silvia S; Tena-Sempere. Manuel M; Grossmann. Roland R; Jiménez. Magdalena Romero MR; Rodriguez. Juan Manuel Castellano JM; Valenzuela. Francisco F

Key Findings

  • Food restriction boosts ghrelin and its receptor in the brains and ovaries of old chickens, but lowers ghrelin in young chickens.
  • s ghrelin‑receptor (GHS‑R1a) expression without changing ghrelin levels.",

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study hints that GHRP‑6–type compounds can influence the brain’s ghrelin system, potentially affecting hunger and metabolism, but the effects may differ with age and nutritional state. However, because the work is in chickens and focuses on gene expression rather than functional outcomes, it offers limited direct guidance for human dosing or protocols.

Summary

In chickens, skipping meals or being older changes how much ghrelin (the hunger hormone) and its receptor are made in the brain and ovaries. Giving ghrelin itself or a GHRP‑6‑like blocker can raise the brain's ghrelin receptor levels, but they don’t have the same effect in the ovary. The related peptide obestatin can also tweak these signals.

Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to identify the role of age, nutritional state and some metabolic hormones in control of avian hypothalamic and ovarian ghrelin/ghrelin receptor system. We examined the effect of food restriction, administration of ghrelin 1-18, ghrelin antagonistic analogue (D-Lys-3)-GHRP-6, obestatin and combinations of them on the expression of ghrelin and ghrelin receptor (GHS-R1a) in hypothalamus and ovary of old (23months of age) and young (7months of age) chickens. Expression of mRNAs for ghrelin and GHS-R1a in both hypothalamus and largest ovarian follicle was measured by RT-PCR. It was observed that food restriction could promote the expression of ghrelin and GHS-R1a in hypothalamus and ovary of the old chickens, but in the young chickens it reduced expression of ghrelin and did not affect expression of GHS-R1a in the ovary. Administration of ghrelin 1-18 did not affect hypothalamic or ovarian ghrelin mRNA, but significantly increased the expression of GHS-R1a in hypothalamus, but not in ovary. (D-Lys-3)-GHRP-6, significantly stimulated accumulation of ghrelin, but not GHS-R1a mRNA in hypothalamus or ghrelin or GHS-R1a in the ovary. Ghrelin 1-18 and (D-Lys-3)-GHRP-6, when given together, were able either to prevent or to induce effect of these hormones. Obestatin administration increased expression of ghrelin gene in the hypothalamus, but not expression of hypothalamic GHS-R1a, ovarian ghrelin and GHS-R1a. Furthermore, obestatin was able to modify effect of both ghrelin and fasting on hypothalamic and ovarian mRNA for ghrelin GHS-R1a. Our results (1) confirm the existence of ghrelin and its functional receptors GHS-R1a in the chicken hypothalamus and ovary (2) confirm the age-dependent control of ovarian ghrelin by feeding, (3) demonstrate, that nutritional status can influence the expression of both ghrelin and GHS-R1a in hypothalamus and in the ovary (3) demonstrates for the first time, that ghrelin can promote generation of its functional receptor in the hypothalamus, but not in the ovary, (4) show that ghrelin1-18 and (D-Lys-3)-GHRP-6 could not only be antagonists in the action on chicken hypothalamus and ovaries, but also independent regulators and even agonists, and (5) provide first evidence for action of obestatin on hypothalamic ghrelin and on the response of hypothalamic and ovarian ghrelin/GHS-R1a system to food restriction. These data indicate the involvement of both hypothalamic and ovarian ghrelin/GHS-R1 systems in mediating the effects of nutritional status, ghrelin and obestatin on reproductive processes.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-08-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.cbpa.2012.07.010

Citations

28

References

38