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Semax

ACTH(4-10) analogue, Heptapeptide SEMAX

Quick Stats
Studies 172
Trials 37
Score 3
2009 pubmed 14 citations

Formation of spatial memory in rats with ischemic lesions to the prefrontal cortex; effects of a synthetic analog of ACTH(4-7).

Silachev. D N DN; Shram. S I SI; Shakova. F M FM; Romanova. G A GA; Myasoedov. N F NF

Key Findings

  • Photothrombosis in the prefrontal cortex impairs spatial memory in rats.
  • Six days of intranasal semax (250 µg/kg/day) after the injury restores learning performance in the Morris water maze.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study suggests that semax may have neuroprotective and cognition‑supporting properties after acute brain stress, but the evidence is limited to rodents and short‑term dosing. Translating the dose to humans would require careful scaling and safety testing, so while intriguing, it isn’t ready for direct self‑administration protocols.

Summary

In rats with a small stroke in the prefrontal cortex, daily intranasal doses of the peptide semax (250 µg per kg) for six days helped them recover their ability to learn a spatial maze, likely by protecting brain cells and boosting growth factors.

Abstract

Photochemically induced thrombosis of blood vessels in the prefrontal cortex in rats was shown to lead to ischemic infarcts in the lesion zone. Bilateral ischemic lesioning of the prefrontal cortex degraded measures of spatial memory when animals were tested in a Morris water maze with an invisible platform 20-24 days after surgery. Chronic intranasal administration of the peptide Met-Glu-His-Phe-Pro-Gly-Pro (Semax), a synthetic analog of ACTH(4-7), at a dose of 250 microg/kg/day during the first six days after photothrombosis, led to recovery of the animals' learning ability. The long-term antiamnestic action of the peptide observed here may result from its neuroprotective activity and its ability to stimulate the synthesis of neurotrophic factors.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-09-23T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s11055-009-9197-4

Citations

14

References

31