Endogenous ghrelin is an orexigenic peptide acting in the arcuate nucleus in response to fasting.
Bagnasco. Michela M; Tulipano. Giovanni G; Melis. Maria R MR; Argiolas. Antonio A; Cocchi. Daniela D; Muller. Eugenio E EE
Key Findings
- Injecting ghrelin into the arcuate nucleus of rats increases food intake in a dose‑dependent way.
- Blocking the Y5 neuropeptide Y receptor cuts the ghrelin‑driven eating response by about half.
- Neutralizing ghrelin in the brain (via antibodies) reduces overall food consumption, with a stronger effect when delivered broadly into the ventricles than directly into the arcuate nucleus.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in appetite control, this research highlights that central (brain) ghrelin signaling is a key driver of hunger. However, the findings are specific to animal models and focus on ghrelin, not sermorelin, so they offer no direct guidance for using sermorelin in humans.
Summary
The study shows that ghrelin, a stomach‑derived hormone, directly stimulates appetite when it acts in a specific brain region (the arcuate nucleus). Blocking certain appetite‑related receptors reduces this effect, and neutralizing ghrelin in the brain lowers food intake, especially over a full day.
Abstract
Ghrelin, a circulating growth-hormone releasing peptide derived from stomach, stimulates food intake through neuropeptide Y (NPY) neurons of the arcuate nucleus in the hypothalamus (ARC). We examined the effect of ghrelin microinjected into the ARC and the influence of intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) pretreatment with a GHRH or NPY receptor antagonist on ghrelin-induced food intake in free-feeding male rats. Ghrelin (0.1-1 microg) stimulated food intake in a dose-dependent manner, and this effect was reduced by 55-60% by the Y(5) NPY receptor antagonist (10 microg i.c.v.), but not by the GHRH receptor antagonist MZ-4-71 (10 microg i.c.v.). We also evaluated the effects of passive ghrelin immunoneutralization by the microinjection of anti-ghrelin immunoglobulins (IgGs) intracerebroventricularly or directly into the ARC on food intake in free-feeding and fasted male rats. i.c.v. administration of anti-ghrelin IgGs decreased cumulative food intake over 24 h, whereas microinfusion of anti-ghrelin IgGs into the ARC induced only a short-lived (2 and 6 h) effect. Collectively, these data would indicate that centrally derived ghrelin has a major role in the control of food intake in rats and, in this context, blood-born ghrelin would be effective only in relation to its ability to reach the ARC, which is devoid of blood-brain barrier.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
2003-03-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/s0167-0115(02)00283-5