Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Thymosin-beta-4-fragment

Ac-SDKP, Goralatide, Seraspenide

Quick Stats
Studies 83
Trials 3
Score 2
2016 pubmed

Treatment of traumatic brain injury in rats with N-acetyl-seryl-aspartyl-lysyl-proline.

Zhang. Yanlu Y; Zhang. Zheng Gang ZG; Chopp. Michael M; Meng. Yuling Y; Zhang. Li L; Mahmood. Asim A; Xiong. Ye Y

Key Findings

  • AcSDKP given 1 hour after traumatic brain injury improved sensorimotor function and spatial learning in rats
  • It reduced brain lesion size, neuron loss, fibrin buildup, and microglial activation
  • The peptide increased angiogenesis, neurogenesis, dendritic spine density, and blocked TGF‑β1/NF‑κB inflammatory signaling

Practical Outcomes

  • While the results are promising, the study is pre‑clinical and used sub‑cutaneous infusion in rats, so it isn’t ready for self‑administration. It suggests that early, low‑dose AcSDKP could be neuroprotective, but human dosing, safety, and delivery methods need thorough research before any DIY protocol.

Summary

In a rat study, giving the tiny peptide AcSDKP a few hours after a brain injury helped the animals recover better, learn faster, and showed less damage and inflammation in the brain. The peptide also boosted blood vessel growth and new brain cells, suggesting it could protect and repair the brain after injury, but this was only tested in animals under controlled conditions.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The authors' previous studies have suggested that thymosin beta 4 (Tβ4), a major actin-sequestering protein, improves functional recovery after neural injury. N-acetyl-seryl-aspartyl-lysyl-proline (AcSDKP) is an active peptide fragment of Tβ4. Its effect as a treatment of traumatic brain injury (TBI) has not been investigated. Thus, this study was designed to determine whether AcSDKP treatment improves functional recovery in rats after TBI. METHODS Young adult male Wistar rats were randomly divided into the following groups: 1) sham group (no injury); 2) TBI + vehicle group (0.01 N acetic acid); and 3) TBI + AcSDKP (0.8 mg/kg/day). TBI was induced by controlled cortical impact over the left parietal cortex. AcSDKP or vehicle was administered subcutaneously starting 1 hour postinjury and continuously for 3 days using an osmotic minipump. Sensorimotor function and spatial learning were assessed using a modified Neurological Severity Score and Morris water maze tests, respectively. Some of the animals were euthanized 1 day after injury, and their brains were processed for measurement of fibrin accumulation and neuroinflammation signaling pathways. The remaining animals were euthanized 35 days after injury, and brain sections were processed for measurement of lesion volume, hippocampal cell loss, angiogenesis, neurogenesis, and dendritic spine remodeling. RESULTS Compared with vehicle treatment, AcSDKP treatment initiated 1 hour postinjury significantly improved sensorimotor functional recovery (Days 7-35, p < 0.05) and spatial learning (Days 33-35, p < 0.05), reduced cortical lesion volume, and hippocampal neuronal cell loss, reduced fibrin accumulation and activation of microglia/macrophages, enhanced angiogenesis and neurogenesis, and increased the number of dendritic spines in the injured brain (p < 0.05). AcSDKP treatment also significantly inhibited the transforming growth factor-β1/nuclear factor-κB signaling pathway. CONCLUSIONS AcSDKP treatment initiated 1 hour postinjury provides neuroprotection and neurorestoration after TBI, indicating that this small tetrapeptide has promising therapeutic potential for treatment of TBI. Further investigation of the optimal dose and therapeutic window of AcSDKP treatment for TBI and the associated underlying mechanisms is therefore warranted.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-05-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3171/2016.3.jns152699