Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.301, No.2, 275-279, 2003
Anti-cachectic effect of ghrelin in nude mice bearing human melanoma cells
Ghrelin is a novel brain-gut peptide that stimulates food intake and body weight gain. We studied the anabolic effect of ghrelin in cancer cachexia mouse model. SEKI, a human melanoma cell line, was inoculated into nude mice to examine the effects of ghrelin on food intake and body weight. The intraperitoneal administration of ghrelin twice a day (6 nmol/mice/day) for 6 days suppressed weight loss in SEKI-inoculated mice and increased the rate of weight gain in vehicle-treated nude mice. Ghrelin administration also increased food intake in both SEKI-and vehicle-treated mice. Both the weight of white adipose tissue and the plasma leptin concentration were reduced in tumor-inoculated mice compared with vehicle-treated mice; these factors increased following ghrelin administration. The levels of both ghrelin peptide and mRNA in the stomach were upregulated in tumor-inoculated mice. The anabolic effect of ghrelin efficiently reverses the cachexia in mice bearing SEKI human melanoma. Ghrelin therefore may have a therapeutic ability to ameliorate cancer cachexia. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.