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
pubmed
2006
2006-09-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/me.2006-0146