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Hexarelin

Examorelin, HEX

Quick Stats
Studies 233
Trials 61
Score 2
2009 pubmed 82 citations

Desacyl-ghrelin and synthetic GH-secretagogues modulate the production of inflammatory cytokines in mouse microglia cells stimulated by beta-amyloid fibrils.

Bulgarelli. Ilaria I; Tamiazzo. Laura L; Bresciani. Elena E; Rapetti. Daniela D; Caporali. Simona S; Lattuada. Donatella D; Locatelli. Vittorio V; Torsello. Antonio A

Key Findings

  • Beta‑amyloid (fAbeta) raises IL‑1β and IL‑6 mRNA in mouse microglia cells.
  • Desacyl‑ghrelin, hexarelin, and EP80317 (10⁻⁷ M) suppress the fAbeta‑induced increase in IL‑1β and IL‑6 mRNA, while acyl‑ghrelin does not.
  • The anti‑inflammatory effect appears to be mediated through CD36, not the classic GHS‑R1a receptor.

Practical Outcomes

  • Hexarelin shows promise as a molecule that could reduce brain inflammation linked to amyloid, hinting at a neuroprotective role. However, the data are limited to mouse cells and high nanomolar concentrations, with no human safety or dosing information, so it isn’t ready for self‑experimentation or protocol changes yet.

Summary

In a mouse brain cell model, the amyloid protein that builds up in Alzheimer's triggers inflammation. The synthetic peptide hexarelin (along with related compounds) was able to block this inflammatory response, likely by interfering with a receptor called CD36. Regular ghrelin didn't work, and the usual ghrelin receptor wasn't involved.

Abstract

Data from Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and AD animal models demonstrate the accumulation of inflammatory microglia at sites of insoluble fibrillar beta-amyloid protein (fAbeta) deposition. It is known that fAbeta binds to CD36, a type B scavenger receptor also involved in internalization of oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL), and initiate a signaling cascade that regulates microglial recruitment, activation, and secretion of inflammatory mediators leading to neuronal dysfunction and death. The recent demonstration of a binding site for the growth hormone secretagogues (GHS) on CD36 prompted us to ascertain whether ghrelin and synthetic GHS could modulate the synthesis of inflammatory cytokines in fAbeta-activated microglia cells. We demonstrate that N9 microglia cells express the CD36 and are a suitable model to study the activation of inflammatory cytokines synthesis. In fact, in N9 cells exposed to fAbeta(25-35) for 24 hr, the expression of interleukin (IL)-1beta and IL-6 mRNA significantly increased. Interestingly, 10(-7) M desacyl-ghrelin, hexarelin, and EP80317 in the nanomolar range effectively counteracted fAbeta(25-35) stimulation of IL-6 mRNA levels, whereas ghrelin was ineffective. Similarly, the effects of fAbeta(25-35) on IL-1beta mRNA levels were attenuated by desacyl-ghrelin, hexarelin, and EP80317, but not ghrelin. Because we have observed that the specific GHS receptor GHS-R1a is not expressed in N9 cells, the actions of GHS should be mediated by different receptors. Reportedly, hexarelin and EP80317 are capable of binding the CD36 in mouse macrophages and reducing atherosclerotic plaque deposition in mice. We conclude that desacyl-ghrelin, hexarelin, and EP80317 might interfere with fAbeta activation of CD36 in microglia cells.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-09-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/jnr.22088

Citations

82

References

43