Ghrelin

Ghrelin/obestatin prepropeptide
Identifiers
Symbols GHRL; MTLRP; ghrelin
External IDs OMIM605353 MGI1930008 HomoloGene9487 GeneCards: GHRL Gene
Orthologs
Species Human Mouse
Entrez 51738 58991
Ensembl ENSG00000157017 ENSMUSG00000064177
UniProt Q9UBU3 Q9EQX0
RefSeq (mRNA) NM_001134941.1 NM_021488.4
RefSeq (protein) NP_001128413.1 NP_067463.2
Location (UCSC) Chr 3:
10.33 – 10.33 Mb
Chr 6:
113.67 – 113.67 Mb
PubMed search [1] [2]

Ghrelin is a 28 amino acid peptide and hormone that is produced mainly by P/D1 cells lining the fundus of the human stomach and epsilon cells of the pancreas that stimulates hunger.[1] Ghrelin levels increase before meals and decrease after meals. It is considered the counterpart of the hormone leptin, produced by adipose tissue, which induces satiation when present at higher levels. In some bariatric procedures, the level of ghrelin is reduced in patients, thus causing satiation before it would normally occur.

Ghrelin is a potent stimulator of growth hormone from the anterior pituitary gland.[2] The ghrelin receptor is a G protein-coupled receptor, known as the growth hormone secretagogue receptor. Ghrelin binds to the GHSR1a splice-variant of this receptor which is present in high density in the hypothalamus, pituitary as well as vagal afferent cell bodies and vagal afferent endings throughout the gastro-intestinal tract [3][4]

Ghrelin plays a significant role in neurotrophy, particularly in the hippocampus, and is essential for cognitive adaptation to changing environments and the process of learning.[5][6] Recently, ghrelin has been shown to activate the endothelial isoform of nitric oxide synthase in a pathway that depends on various kinases including Akt.[7]

Contents

History and name

The discovery of ghrelin followed after the discovery of the ghrelin receptor in 1996[8] and was reported by Masayasu Kojima and colleagues in 1999.[2] The name is based on its role as a growth hormone-releasing peptide, with reference to the Proto-Indo-European root ghre, meaning to grow. The name can also be viewed as an interesting (and incidental) pun, too, as the initial letters of the phrase growth hormone-releasing give us "ghre" with "lin" as a usual suffix for some hormones.

Synthesis and variants

The mRNA from the ghrl gene codes for a 117 amino acid peptide called preproghrelin, containing 4 exons of the GHRL gene. The signalling peptide molecule of this larger precursor is cleaved to produce proghrelin. Proghrelin is cleaved in two to produce the 28 amino acid peptide ghrelin (unacylated) and C-ghrelin (of which obestatin is presumed to be cleaved from).[3]

'Ghrelin' usually refers to the octanoylated form of ghrelin (acyl ghrelin). This is the 28 amino acid peptide sequence with an octanoylation on the third amino acid (Serine). The octanoylation is performed by the Ghrelin O-acyltransferase (GOAT) protein (a member of the membrane-bound O-Acyltransferase family of proteins), located in the stomach and pancreas.[3] This peptide can activate the GHSR receptor and is thus known as the active form of ghrelin. The non-octanoylated form is known as desacyl ghrelin or the inactive form (it does not activate GHSR1a and thus does not release GH like acyl ghrelin), however studies have shown it has its own effects.[9][10][11][12] Side chains other than octanoyl have also been observed.[13]

Mechanism of action

Ghrelin has emerged as the first identified circulating hunger hormone. Ghrelin and synthetic ghrelin mimetics (the growth hormone secretagogues) increase food intake and increase fat mass[14][15] by an action exerted at the level of the hypothalamus. They activate cells in the arcuate nucleus[16][17] that include the orexigenic neuropeptide Y (NPY) neurons.[18] Ghrelin-responsiveness of these neurons is both leptin- and insulin-sensitive.[19] Ghrelin also activates the mesolimbic cholinergic-dopaminergic reward link, a circuit that communicates the hedonic and reinforcing aspects of natural rewards, such as food, as well as of addictive drugs, such as ethanol.[20][21][19]

There is also strong evidence that ghrelin has a peripheral appetite modulatory effect on satiety by affecting the mechanosensitivity of gastric vagal afferents, making them less sensitive to distension resulting in over eating.[4]

Relation to obestatin

Obestatin is a putative hormone that was described, in late 2005, to decrease appetite. Both obestatin and ghrelin are encoded by the same gene; the gene's product breaks apart to yield the two peptide hormones.[22] The physiological value of this mechanism is unknown, and it should be noted that no secretory convertase is capable of cleaving the recombinant precursor by cleavage at the single basic residue required for generation of obestatin; thus the physiological generation of this peptide is questionable.[23]

Function

Gastrointestinal tract

Ghrelin has been proposed as a hormone which promotes intestinal cell proliferation and inhibits its apoptosis during inflammatory states and oxidative stress.[24][25] It also suppresses the pro-inflammatory mechanisms and augments anti-inflammatory mechanisms thus creating a possibility of its therapeutic use in various gastrointestinal inflammatory conditions including colitis, ischemia reperfusion injury and sepsis.[26][27] In fact, animal models of colitis, ischemia re-perfusion and sepsis related gut dysfunction have been shown to be benefited with therapeutic doses of ghrelin.[26][27] It has also been shown to have regenerative capacity and is beneficial in case of mucosal injury to the stomach.[28] Ghrelin also enhances the motility of gastrointestinal tract, as does motilin. Ghrelin also appears to promote gastrointestinal and pancreatic malignancy.[29][30][31]

Lung development

In fetuses, it seems that ghrelin is produced early by the lung and promotes growth.[32]

Learning and memory

Animal models indicate that ghrelin may enter the hippocampus from the bloodstream, altering nerve-cell connections, and so enhancing learning and memory. It is suggested that learning may be best during the day and when the stomach is empty, since ghrelin levels are higher at these times. The team of the Yale School of Medicine also noted that a similar effect for human neural-physiology is quite plausible.[33] In rodents, X/A-like cells produce ghrelin.

Stress-induced depression

The hormone might help defend against symptoms of stress-induced depression and anxiety.[34] To test whether ghrelin could regulate depressive symptoms brought on by chronic stress, the researchers subjected mice to daily bouts of social stress, using a standard laboratory technique that induces stress by exposing normal mice to very aggressive “bully” mice. Such animals have been shown to be good models for studying depression in humans. The researchers stressed both wild-type mice and altered mice that were unable to respond to ghrelin. They found that, after experiencing stress, both types of mice had significantly elevated levels of ghrelin that persisted at least four weeks after their last defeat encounter. The altered mice, however, displayed significantly greater social avoidance than their wild-type counterparts, indicating an exacerbation of depression-like symptoms. They also ate less than the wild-type mice.[35]

Sleep-Duration

A study [36] appearing in the journal PLoS Medicine suggests that short sleep duration is associated with high levels of ghrelin and obesity; ghrelin appears to be a factor contributing to the short sleep duration and obesity. Scientists have uncovered an inverse relationship between the hours of sleep and blood plasma concentrations of ghrelin; as the hours of sleep increase, ghrelin concentrations were considerably lower, thereby potentially reducing appetite and avoiding potential obesity.

Clinical significance

Ghrelin levels in the plasma of obese individuals are lower than those in leaner individuals[37] thus suggesting that ghrelin does not contribute to obesity, except in the cases of Prader-Willi syndrome-induced obesity where high ghrelin levels are correlated with increased food intake.[38][39] Those suffering from the eating disorder anorexia nervosa have high plasma levels of ghrelin compared to both the constitutionally thin and normal-weight controls.[40] The use of Ghrelin on Anorexia Nervosa patients has been shown to increase food intake by 12-36% over the trial period.[41]

Yildiz and colleagues found that the level of ghrelin increases during the time of day from midnight to dawn in thinner people, suggesting a flaw in the circadian system of obese individuals.[42] Professor Cappuccio of the University of Warwick has recently discovered that short sleep duration may also lead to obesity, through an increase of appetite via hormonal changes. Lack of sleep produces ghrelin, which stimulates appetite and creates less leptin, which, among its many other effects, suppresses appetite.

Ghrelin levels are also high in patients that have cancer-induced cachexia.[43]

At least one study found that gastric bypass surgery not only reduces the gut's capacity for food but also dramatically lowers ghrelin levels compared to both lean controls and those that lost weight through dieting alone.[44]

Ghrelin through its receptor increases the concentration of dopamine in the substantia nigra, a region of the brain where dopamine cell degeneration leads to Parkinson's disease. Hence ghrelin may find application in slowing down the onset of Parkinson's disease.[45]

Anti-obesity vaccine

Recently, research scientists have developed an anti-obesity vaccine, which is directed against the hormone ghrelin in rodents[46] and pigs.[47] The vaccine uses the immune system, specifically antibodies, to bind to selected targets, directing the body's own immune response against them. This prevents ghrelin from reaching the central nervous system, thus producing a desired reduction in weight gain.

References

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