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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
2011 pubmed 16 citations

Effect of ghrelin receptor antagonist on meal patterns in cholecystokinin type 1 receptor null mice.

Lee. Jennifer J; Martin. Elizabeth E; Paulino. Gabriel G; de Lartigue. Guillaume G; Raybould. Helen E HE

Key Findings

  • CCK‑1 receptor knockout mice on a high‑fat diet eat larger, longer meals and start eating sooner than normal mice.
  • Blocking the ghrelin receptor with D‑(Lys3)‑GHRP‑6 restores normal meal timing, size, and duration in these knockout mice.
  • The antagonist also raises CART neuropeptide levels in vagal afferent neurons and reduces activity markers in brain regions that control feeding.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study hints that ghrelin signaling contributes to overeating on high‑fat diets, especially when other satiety pathways are impaired. While the specific antagonist used is not a common supplement, it suggests that ghrelin‑blocking strategies (e.g., fasting, certain nutrients, or experimental antagonists) might help curb appetite. However, the findings are in genetically altered mice, so direct human application remains speculative.

Summary

In mice that lack the normal CCK‑1 satiety receptor, eating a high‑fat diet makes them start meals sooner, eat bigger meals, and stay longer at the table. Giving them a drug that blocks the ghrelin receptor (D‑(Lys3)‑GHRP‑6) reverses these effects, suggesting that ghrelin is driving the overeating when CCK signaling is missing.

Abstract

Vagal afferent neurons (VAN) express the cholecystokinin (CCK) type 1 receptor (CCK₁R) and, as predicted by the role of CCK in inducing satiation, CCK₁R⁻/⁻ mice ingest larger and longer meals. However, after a short fast, CCK₁R⁻/⁻ mice ingesting high fat (HF) diets initiate feeding earlier than wild-type mice. We hypothesized that the increased drive to eat in CCK₁R⁻/⁻ mice eating HF diet is mediated by ghrelin, a gut peptide that stimulates food intake. The decrease in time to first meal, and the increase in meal size and duration in CCK₁R⁻/⁻ compared to wild-type mice ingesting high fat (HF) diet were reversed by administration of GHSR1a antagonist D-(Lys3)-GHRP-6 (p<0.05). Administration of the GHSR1a antagonist significantly increased expression of the neuropeptide cocaine and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) in VAN of HF-fed CCK₁R⁻/⁻ but not wild-type mice. Administration of the GHSR1a antagonist decreased neuronal activity measured by immunoreactivity for fos protein in the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) and the arcuate nucleus of both HF-fed wild-type and CCK₁R⁻/⁻ mice. The data show that hyperphagia in CCK₁R⁻/⁻ mice ingesting HF diet is reversed by blockade of the ghrelin receptor, suggesting that in the absence of the CCK₁R, there is an increased ghrelin-dependent drive to feed. The site of action of ghrelin receptors is unclear, but may involve an increase in expression of CART peptide in VAN in HF-fed CCK₁R⁻/⁻ mice.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-01-26T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.physbeh.2011.01.018

Citations

16

References

36