Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that growth hormone-releasing peptides (GHRPs) mimic an unidentified native GH-releasing hormone (GHRH)-amplifying hormone. GHRH has been shown to stimulate food intake acting on the central nervous system. The present studies were conducted to test the hypothesis that GHRPs may also potentiate the central effect of GHRH on feeding in free-feeding rats. Intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of picomole doses of a newly developed GHRP, KP-102, or human GHRH stimulated feeding, but the phenomenon was not reproduced by systemic injection. A prior ICV injection of a GHRH antagonist completely prevented the increase of food intake evoked by GHRH, but this pretreatment did not influence the increase in food intake induced by KP-102. When maximally effective doses of GHRH and KP-102 were co-administered ICV, the amount of food intake increased significantly compared with after ICV injection of a maximum dose of either peptide alone. These findings suggest that GHRPs stimulate food intake via a specific receptor for GHRPs in the central nervous system and amplify the central effect of GHRH on feeding.

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