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Hexarelin

Examorelin, HEX

Quick Stats
Studies 233
Trials 61
Score 2
2006 pubmed

A growth hormone-releasing peptide that binds scavenger receptor CD36 and ghrelin receptor up-regulates sterol transporters and cholesterol efflux in macrophages through a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma-dependent pathway.

Avallone. Roberta R; Demers. Annie A; Rodrigue-Way. Amélie A; Bujold. Kim K; Harb. Diala D; Anghel. Silvia S; Wahli. Walter W; Marleau. Sylvie S; Ong. Huy H; Tremblay. André A

Key Findings

  • Hexarelin activates PPAR‑gamma via CD36 and the ghrelin receptor, increasing cholesterol‑efflux transporters (ABCA1, ABCG1) in macrophages
  • In mice prone to atherosclerosis, hexarelin reduced plaque size and raised expression of PPAR‑gamma and LXR‑alpha target genes
  • The cholesterol‑clearing effect required PPAR‑gamma, but hexarelin did not raise CD36 levels, showing a selective gene‑regulation pattern

Practical Outcomes

  • At this point, hexarelin isn’t ready for self‑experimentation as a heart‑health supplement. The study suggests it could become a tool for reducing plaque, but human trials, dosing, and safety data are needed before any protocol can be recommended.

Summary

Hexarelin, a peptide that makes the body release growth hormone, was shown in lab cells and mice to boost the removal of cholesterol from immune cells and shrink artery plaque, working through a protein called PPAR‑gamma. However, the work is still early‑stage and only in animals, so there’s no clear dosing or safety guide for people yet.

Abstract

Macrophages play a central role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis by accumulating cholesterol through increased uptake of oxidized low-density lipoproteins by scavenger receptor CD36, leading to foam cell formation. Here we demonstrate the ability of hexarelin, a GH-releasing peptide, to enhance the expression of ATP-binding cassette A1 and G1 transporters and cholesterol efflux in macrophages. These effects were associated with a transcriptional activation of nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)gamma in response to binding of hexarelin to CD36 and GH secretagogue-receptor 1a, the receptor for ghrelin. The hormone binding domain was not required to mediate PPARgamma activation by hexarelin, and phosphorylation of PPARgamma was increased in THP-1 macrophages treated with hexarelin, suggesting that the response to hexarelin may involve PPARgamma activation function-1 activity. However, the activation of PPARgamma by hexarelin did not lead to an increase in CD36 expression, as opposed to liver X receptor (LXR)alpha, suggesting a differential regulation of PPARgamma-targeted genes in response to hexarelin. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays showed that, in contrast to a PPARgamma agonist, the occupancy of the CD36 promoter by PPARgamma was not increased in THP-1 macrophages treated with hexarelin, whereas the LXRalpha promoter was strongly occupied by PPARgamma in the same conditions. Treatment of apolipoprotein E-null mice maintained on a lipid-rich diet with hexarelin resulted in a significant reduction in atherosclerotic lesions, concomitant with an enhanced expression of PPARgamma and LXRalpha target genes in peritoneal macrophages. The response was strongly impaired in PPARgamma(+/-) macrophages, indicating that PPARgamma was required to mediate the effect of hexarelin. These findings provide a novel mechanism by which the beneficial regulation of PPARgamma and cholesterol metabolism in macrophages could be regulated by CD36 and ghrelin receptor downstream effects.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-09-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1210/me.2006-0146