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P021

Peptide 021, GLXC-21260

Quick Stats
Studies 37
Trials 57
Score 3
2015 pubmed

Elevated Tau Level in Aged Rat Cerebrospinal Fluid Reduced by Treatment with a Neurotrophic Compound.

Khatoon. Sabiha S; Chalbot. Sonia S; Bolognin. Silvia S; Puoliväli. Jukka J; Iqbal. Khalid K

Key Findings

  • P021 is orally bioavailable and crosses the blood‑brain barrier in rats
  • Chronic P021 treatment lowered total tau levels in brain and CSF of aged rats
  • P021 did not trigger detectable immune responses in the animals

Practical Outcomes

  • The results suggest that P021 could be a promising oral agent for reducing tau, a key Alzheimer’s marker, but it’s only been tested in rats so far. Biohackers should view this as early‑stage evidence and wait for human safety and dosage data before considering any self‑experimentation.

Summary

A study in older rats found that an oral peptide called P021 can cross the brain barrier and lower the amount of tau protein in the brain and spinal fluid, which is linked to Alzheimer’s disease, without causing immune reactions.

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the single major cause of dementia in middle- to old-age individuals, and, as of yet, no disease-modifying therapeutic drug is available for its treatment. A major obstacle in the successful development of disease-modifying therapeutic drugs has been the lack of suitable animal models of the sporadic form of AD as well as a biomarker that can be used both for therapeutic preclinical studies and for human clinical trials. Previously we showed neurogenesis and neuronal plasticity deficits and cognitive impairment and their rescue with a neurotrophic peptidergic compound, DGGLAG named P021, in aged Fisher rats. Here we show that P021 is blood-brain-barrier-permeable, and chronic oral treatment with this compound can reduce the brain level of total tau in the aged rats. Furthermore, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of both tau and Aβ/AβPP are elevated in the aged animals, and chronic treatment with P021 can reduce tau but not Aβ/AβPP to that of the levels found in young adult rats. Importantly, P021 does not induce any detectable immune reaction in rats. Collectively, these studies show the therapeutic potential of P021 as a disease-modifying compound and the suitability of the aged Fisher rats as a model of cerebral aging in which the therapeutic efficacy of a tau-reducing compound can be monitored in the CSF.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2015

DOI

10.3233/jad-142799