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Tripeptide-1

GHK, Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine

Quick Stats
Studies 27
Trials 5
Score 2
2022 pubmed 12 citations

A Role for Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 in the Generation of Epileptic Spasms in a murine model.

Ballester-Rosado. Carlos J CJ; Le. John T JT; Lam. Trang T TT; Mohila. Carrie A CA; Lam. Sandi S; Anderson. Anne E AE; Frost. James D JD; Swann. John W JW

Key Findings

  • Neurons in the spasm‑prone brain lose IGF‑1 while nearby astrocytes gain it.
  • A short IGF‑1 fragment (1‑3)IGF‑1 activates the IGF‑1 receptor and restores signaling.
  • Treating the mice with (1‑3)IGF‑1 stopped the spasms and the chaotic EEG patterns in most animals.

Practical Outcomes

  • While the results are promising for developing new seizure therapies, the work is still in early animal models and not ready for human use. Biohackers should view this as a proof‑of‑concept that IGF‑1‑based peptides might have neuroprotective effects, but no dosage or protocol can be recommended yet.

Summary

Scientists found that a tiny piece of the IGF‑1 protein (called (1‑3)IGF‑1) can stop seizure‑like spasms in baby mice by re‑activating the IGF‑1 pathway in the brain. The study shows that loss of IGF‑1 in neurons is linked to these spasms, and giving the tripeptide restores normal signaling and eliminates the abnormal brain activity.

Abstract

Infantile spasms are associated with a wide variety of clinical conditions, including perinatal brain injuries. We have created a model in which prolonged infusion of tetrodotoxin (TTX) into the neocortex, beginning in infancy, produces a localized lesion and reproduces the behavioral spasms, electroencephalogram (EEG) abnormalities, and drug responsiveness seen clinically. Here, we undertook experiments to explore the possibility that the growth factor IGF-1 plays a role in generating epileptic spasms. We combined long-term video EEG recordings with quantitative immunohistochemical and biochemical analyses to unravel IGF-1's role in spasm generation. Immunohistochemistry was undertaken in surgically resected tissue from infantile spasms patients. We used viral injections in neonatal conditional IGF-1R knock-out mice to show that an IGF-1-derived tripeptide (1-3)IGF-1, acts through the IGF-1 receptor to abolish spasms. Immunohistochemical methods revealed widespread loss of IGF-1 from cortical neurons, but an increase in IGF-1 in the reactive astrocytes in the TTX-induced lesion. Very similar changes were observed in the neocortex from patients with spasms. In animals, we observed reduced signaling through the IGF-1 growth pathways in areas remote from the lesion. To show the reduction in IGF-1 expression plays a role in spasm generation, epileptic rats were treated with (1-3)IGF-1. We provide 3 lines of evidence that (1-3)IGF-1 activates the IGF-1 signaling pathway by acting through the receptor for IGF-1. Treatment with (1-3)IGF-1 abolished spasms and hypsarrhythmia-like activity in the majority of animals. Results implicate IGF-1 in the pathogenesis of infantile spasms and IGF-1 analogues as potential novel therapies for this neurodevelopmental disorder. ANN NEUROL 2022;92:45-60.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-05-10T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/ana.26383

Citations

12

References

51