Cargando…

A Dairy-Derived Ghrelinergic Hydrolysate Modulates Food Intake In Vivo

Recent times have seen an increasing move towards harnessing the health-promoting benefits of food and dietary constituents while providing scientific evidence to substantiate their claims. In particular, the potential for bioactive protein hydrolysates and peptides to enhance health in conjunction...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Howick, Ken, Wallace-Fitzsimons, Shauna E., Kandil, Dalia, Chruścicka, Barbara, Calis, Mert, Murphy, Eoin, Murray, Brian A., Fernandez, Ayoa, Barry, Kate M., Kelly, Phil M., Ryan, Aoife M., Cryan, John F., Griffin, Brendan T., Schellekens, Harriët
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6165545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30223587
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19092780
_version_ 1783359862552395776
author Howick, Ken
Wallace-Fitzsimons, Shauna E.
Kandil, Dalia
Chruścicka, Barbara
Calis, Mert
Murphy, Eoin
Murray, Brian A.
Fernandez, Ayoa
Barry, Kate M.
Kelly, Phil M.
Ryan, Aoife M.
Cryan, John F.
Griffin, Brendan T.
Schellekens, Harriët
author_facet Howick, Ken
Wallace-Fitzsimons, Shauna E.
Kandil, Dalia
Chruścicka, Barbara
Calis, Mert
Murphy, Eoin
Murray, Brian A.
Fernandez, Ayoa
Barry, Kate M.
Kelly, Phil M.
Ryan, Aoife M.
Cryan, John F.
Griffin, Brendan T.
Schellekens, Harriët
author_sort Howick, Ken
collection PubMed
description Recent times have seen an increasing move towards harnessing the health-promoting benefits of food and dietary constituents while providing scientific evidence to substantiate their claims. In particular, the potential for bioactive protein hydrolysates and peptides to enhance health in conjunction with conventional pharmaceutical therapy is being investigated. Dairy-derived proteins have been shown to contain bioactive peptide sequences with various purported health benefits, with effects ranging from the digestive system to cardiovascular circulation, the immune system and the central nervous system. Interestingly, the ability of dairy proteins to modulate metabolism and appetite has recently been reported. The ghrelin receptor (GHSR-1a) is a G-protein coupled receptor which plays a key role in the regulation of food intake. Pharmacological manipulation of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor-type 1a (GHSR-1a) receptor has therefore received a lot of attention as a strategy to combat disorders of appetite and body weight, including age-related malnutrition and the progressive muscle wasting syndrome known as cachexia. In this study, a milk protein-derivative is shown to increase GHSR-1a-mediated intracellular calcium signalling in a concentration-dependent manner in vitro. Significant increases in calcium mobilisation were also observed in a cultured neuronal cell line heterologously expressing the GHS-R1a. In addition, both additive and synergistic effects were observed following co-exposure of GHSR-1a to both the hydrolysate and ghrelin. Subsequent in vivo studies monitored standard chow intake in healthy male and female Sprague-Dawley rats after dosing with the casein hydrolysate (CasHyd). Furthermore, the provision of gastro-protected oral delivery to the bioactive in vivo may aid in the progression of in vitro efficacy to in vivo functionality. In summary, this study reports a ghrelin-stimulating bioactive peptide mixture (CasHyd) with potent effects in vitro. It also provides novel and valuable translational data supporting the potential role of CasHyd as an appetite-enhancing bioactive. Further mechanistic studies are required in order to confirm efficacy as a ghrelinergic bioactive in susceptible population groups.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6165545
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-61655452018-10-10 A Dairy-Derived Ghrelinergic Hydrolysate Modulates Food Intake In Vivo Howick, Ken Wallace-Fitzsimons, Shauna E. Kandil, Dalia Chruścicka, Barbara Calis, Mert Murphy, Eoin Murray, Brian A. Fernandez, Ayoa Barry, Kate M. Kelly, Phil M. Ryan, Aoife M. Cryan, John F. Griffin, Brendan T. Schellekens, Harriët Int J Mol Sci Article Recent times have seen an increasing move towards harnessing the health-promoting benefits of food and dietary constituents while providing scientific evidence to substantiate their claims. In particular, the potential for bioactive protein hydrolysates and peptides to enhance health in conjunction with conventional pharmaceutical therapy is being investigated. Dairy-derived proteins have been shown to contain bioactive peptide sequences with various purported health benefits, with effects ranging from the digestive system to cardiovascular circulation, the immune system and the central nervous system. Interestingly, the ability of dairy proteins to modulate metabolism and appetite has recently been reported. The ghrelin receptor (GHSR-1a) is a G-protein coupled receptor which plays a key role in the regulation of food intake. Pharmacological manipulation of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor-type 1a (GHSR-1a) receptor has therefore received a lot of attention as a strategy to combat disorders of appetite and body weight, including age-related malnutrition and the progressive muscle wasting syndrome known as cachexia. In this study, a milk protein-derivative is shown to increase GHSR-1a-mediated intracellular calcium signalling in a concentration-dependent manner in vitro. Significant increases in calcium mobilisation were also observed in a cultured neuronal cell line heterologously expressing the GHS-R1a. In addition, both additive and synergistic effects were observed following co-exposure of GHSR-1a to both the hydrolysate and ghrelin. Subsequent in vivo studies monitored standard chow intake in healthy male and female Sprague-Dawley rats after dosing with the casein hydrolysate (CasHyd). Furthermore, the provision of gastro-protected oral delivery to the bioactive in vivo may aid in the progression of in vitro efficacy to in vivo functionality. In summary, this study reports a ghrelin-stimulating bioactive peptide mixture (CasHyd) with potent effects in vitro. It also provides novel and valuable translational data supporting the potential role of CasHyd as an appetite-enhancing bioactive. Further mechanistic studies are required in order to confirm efficacy as a ghrelinergic bioactive in susceptible population groups. MDPI 2018-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6165545/ /pubmed/30223587 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19092780 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Howick, Ken
Wallace-Fitzsimons, Shauna E.
Kandil, Dalia
Chruścicka, Barbara
Calis, Mert
Murphy, Eoin
Murray, Brian A.
Fernandez, Ayoa
Barry, Kate M.
Kelly, Phil M.
Ryan, Aoife M.
Cryan, John F.
Griffin, Brendan T.
Schellekens, Harriët
A Dairy-Derived Ghrelinergic Hydrolysate Modulates Food Intake In Vivo
title A Dairy-Derived Ghrelinergic Hydrolysate Modulates Food Intake In Vivo
title_full A Dairy-Derived Ghrelinergic Hydrolysate Modulates Food Intake In Vivo
title_fullStr A Dairy-Derived Ghrelinergic Hydrolysate Modulates Food Intake In Vivo
title_full_unstemmed A Dairy-Derived Ghrelinergic Hydrolysate Modulates Food Intake In Vivo
title_short A Dairy-Derived Ghrelinergic Hydrolysate Modulates Food Intake In Vivo
title_sort dairy-derived ghrelinergic hydrolysate modulates food intake in vivo
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6165545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30223587
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19092780
work_keys_str_mv AT howickken adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT wallacefitzsimonsshaunae adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT kandildalia adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT chruscickabarbara adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT calismert adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT murphyeoin adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT murraybriana adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT fernandezayoa adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT barrykatem adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT kellyphilm adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT ryanaoifem adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT cryanjohnf adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT griffinbrendant adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT schellekensharriet adairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT howickken dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT wallacefitzsimonsshaunae dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT kandildalia dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT chruscickabarbara dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT calismert dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT murphyeoin dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT murraybriana dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT fernandezayoa dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT barrykatem dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT kellyphilm dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT ryanaoifem dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT cryanjohnf dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT griffinbrendant dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo
AT schellekensharriet dairyderivedghrelinergichydrolysatemodulatesfoodintakeinvivo