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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
2006 pubmed

Ghrelin as a novel locally produced relaxing peptide of the iris sphincter and dilator muscles.

Rocha-Sousa. A A; Saraiva. J J; Henriques-Coelho. T T; Falcão-Reis. F F; Correia-Pinto. J J; Leite-Moreira. A F AF

Key Findings

  • Ghrelin causes dose‑dependent relaxation of iris sphincter and dilator muscles in rabbit and rat eyes.
  • The relaxation of the dilator muscle depends on the GHSR‑1a receptor, while sphincter relaxation involves prostaglandins, not nitric oxide or calcium‑activated potassium channels.
  • Ghrelin mRNA is present in the posterior epithelium of the iris, indicating local production.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this study does not provide actionable information for longevity, metabolism, body composition, or performance. The eye‑specific effects of ghrelin are unlikely to translate into useful protocols for systemic health optimization.

Summary

Scientists found that the hormone ghrelin, which is known for stimulating growth hormone, can also relax the muscles that control pupil size in the eye. This effect is local (produced inside the eye) and works through different pathways depending on the muscle type.

Abstract

Ghrelin is a recently described acylated peptide, which works as a somatosecretagogue and has described effects on the smooth, skeletal and cardiac muscle. We examined the production and effects of ghrelin on relaxation of the iris muscles. Contractile effects of 1-5 human ghrelin (frGhr, 10(-9)-6 x 10(-5)M) and 1-5 human des-octanoyl-ghrelin (d-frGhr; 10(-9)-6 x 10(-5)M) were tested on iris rabbit sphincter (n=11 frGhr; n=7 d-frGhr), dilator (n=6 frGhr; n=6 d-frGhr) and rat sphincter (n=6 frGhr; n=8 d-frGhr) precontracted muscles. On rabbit sphincter the effect of frGhr was also tested in presence of: i) L-NA (10(-5)M; n=7); ii) indomethacin (10(-5)M; n=7); iii) DLys(3)GHRP6 (10(-4)M; n=6); and iv) apamin+carybdotoxin (10(-6)M; n=6). Furthermore, on rabbit dilator the effect of frGhr was tested in presence of DLys(3)GHRP6 (10(-4)M; n=7). Finally, ghrelin mRNA production was assessed by "in situ" hybridization in Wistar rat eyes (n=8). In all muscles, frGhr promoted a concentration-dependent relaxation, maximal at 6 x 10(-5)M, 1.5-3 min after its addition, decreasing tension by 34.1+/-12.1%, 25.8+/-4.8% and 52.1+/-10.3% in the rabbit sphincter, dilator and rat sphincter, respectively. In the rabbit sphincter the relaxing effects of frGhr were: (i) enhanced in presence of DLys(3)GHRP6 (118.1+/-21.1%); (ii) blunted by indomethacin; and (iii) not altered by apamin+carybdotoxin (36.4+/-14.4%) or L-NA (52.4+/-11.4%). Relaxing effects of d-frGhr in rabbit (43.3+/-5.2%) and rat (77.1+/-15.3%) sphincter muscles were similar to those of frGhr. In rabbit dilator muscle, d-frGhr did not significantly alter active tension and the relaxing effect of frGhr was blunted by GHSR-1a blockage. Ghrelin mRNA was identified in iris posterior epithelium. In conclusion, ghrelin is a novel, locally produced, relaxing agent of iris dilator and sphincter muscles, an effect that is mediated by GHSR-1a in the former, but not in the latter. Furthermore, in the sphincter it seems to be mediated by prostaglandins, but not by NO or K(Ca) channels.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-08-10T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.exer.2006.06.005