Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

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
2003 pubmed 24 citations

Actions of neuropeptide Y and growth hormone secretagogues in the arcuate nucleus and ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus.

Kumarnsit. Ekkasit E; Johnstone. Louise E LE; Leng. Gareth G

Key Findings

  • Both the arcuate nucleus and ventromedial hypothalamus have functional GHS receptors that respond to GHRP‑6 with long‑lasting neuronal excitation.
  • Neuropeptide Y (NPY) and somatostatin, released after GHS activation, mainly inhibit neurons in these regions, especially in the ventromedial hypothalamus.
  • The net effect in the ventromedial hypothalamus may be reduced activation because NPY released from arcuate neurons counteracts the direct excitatory signal from GHRP‑6.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers using GHRP‑6, expect a strong GH‑releasing signal but also a simultaneous rise in NPY, which can increase appetite and blunt some metabolic benefits. Timing doses (e.g., fasting state) or pairing with strategies that limit NPY activity (like low‑carb meals or intermittent fasting) might enhance the desired effects. The findings suggest that simply increasing GHRP‑6 dose may not linearly boost outcomes due to these built‑in inhibitory pathways.

Summary

The study shows that growth‑hormone secretagogues like GHRP‑6 directly excite neurons in two key brain areas that control hunger and metabolism (the arcuate nucleus and the ventromedial hypothalamus). However, the ventromedial area gets less overall activation because the same drug also triggers release of neuropeptide Y, which can dampen its activity. This explains why the hormone‑boosting effects of GHRP‑6 may be partly balanced by appetite‑stimulating signals.

Abstract

Systemic or central administration of growth-hormone secretagogues (GHS) induces dense Fos expression in the arcuate nucleus but little or no Fos expression in the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus, although both sites show intense expression of mRNA for the GHS receptor. Here, we recorded the electrical activity of single neurons from the arcuate nucleus and from the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus in a rat hypothalamic slice preparation, and compared responses of these two populations to GHS. At both sites, the predominant neuronal response to GHS was a long-lasting excitation, indicating that GHS receptors at both sites are functional and similarly coupled to electrical excitation. We also tested neurons at both sites for their responses to neuropeptide Y and to somatostatin; at both sites the predominant response to each of these peptides was inhibitory. The arcuate cells that are activated by GHS include neuropeptide Y cells and growth hormone-releasing hormone cells. It seems possible that neuropeptide Y released in the ventromedial hypothalamus from the terminals of arcuate neurons counteracts the activation of ventromedial hypothalamic neurons by GHS in vivo, or that somatostatin released following liberation of growth hormone may do so.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2003

Date

2003-03-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1046/j.1460-9568.2003.02521.x

Citations

24

References

25