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Dive into the research topics where Darko Perovic is active.

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Featured researches published by Darko Perovic.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 1997

The influence of a novel pentadecapeptide, BPC 157, on NG-nitro-l-arginine methylester and l-arginine effects on stomach mucosa integrity and blood pressure

Predrag Sikiric; Sven Seiwerth; Željko Grabarević; Rudolf Rucman; Marijan Petek; Vjekoslav Jagić; Branko Turkovic; Ivo Rotkvic; Stjepan Mise; Ivan Zoricic; Paško Konjevoda; Darko Perovic; Ljubica Jurina; Jadranka Separovic; Miro Hanževački; Branka Artuković; Mirna Bratulić; Marina Tišljar; Miro Gjurašin; Pavao Miklić; Dinko Stančić-Rokotov; Zoran Slobodnjak; Nikola Jelovac; Anton Marovic

The known effects of a novel stomach pentadecapeptide BPC157 (10 microg or 10 ng/kg), namely its salutary activity against ethanol (96%, i.g.)-induced gastric lesions (simultaneously applied i.p.) and in blood pressure maintenance (given i.v.), were investigated in rats challenged with a combination of N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methylester (L-NAME) (5 mg/kg i.v.), a competitive inhibitor of endothelium nitric oxide (NO)-generation and NO precursor, L-arginine (200 mg/kg i.v.) (D-arginine was ineffective). In the gastric lesions assay, NO agents were given 5 min before ethanol injury and BPC 157 medication. Given alone, BPC157 had an antiulcer effect, as did L-arginine, but L-NAME had no effect. L-NAME completely abolished the effect of L-arginine, whereas it only attenuated the effect of BPC 157. After application of the combination of L-NAME + L-arginine, the BPC157 effect was additionally impaired. In blood pressure studies, compared with L-arginine, pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (without effect on basal normal values) had both a mimicking effect (impaired L-NAME-blood pressure increase, when applied prophylactically and decreased already raised L-NAME values, given at the time of the maximal L-NAME-blood pressure increase (i.e., 10 min after L-NAME)) and preventive activity (L-arginine-induced moderate blood pressure decrease was prevented by BPC 157 pretreatment). When BPC 157 was given 10 min after L-NAME + L-arginine combination, which still led to a blood pressure increase, its previously clear effect (noted in L-NAME treated rats) disappeared. In vitro, in gastric mucosa from rat stomach tissue homogenates, BPC 157, given in the same dose (100 microM) as L-arginine, induced a comparable generation of NO. But, BPC 157 effect could not be inhibited by L-NAME, even when L-NAME was given in a tenfold (100 versus 1000 microM) higher dose than that needed for inhibition of the L-arginine effect. NO synthesis was blunted when the pentadecapeptide BPC 157 and L-arginine were combined. In summary, BPC 157 could interfere with the effects of NO on both gastric mucosal integrity and blood pressure maintenance in a specific way, especially with L-arginine, having a more prominent and/or particularly different effect from that of NO.


Burns | 2001

Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 cream improves burn-wound healing and attenuates burn-gastric lesions in mice

Darko Mikus; P Sikiric; Sven Seiwerth; A Petricevic; Gorana Aralica; N Druzijancic; Rudolf Rucman; Marijan Petek; Biserka Pigac; Darko Perovic; M Kolombo; Neven Kokić; S Mikus; Božidar Duplančić; I Fattorini; Branko Turkovic; Ivo Rotkvic; Stjepan Mise; Ingrid Prkačin; Paško Konjevoda; N Stambuk; Tomislav Anic

The effects of the gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 were investigated when administered topically or systemically in burned mice. This agent is known to have a beneficial effect in a variety of models of gastrointestinal lesions, as well as on wound or fracture healing. Deep partial skin thickness burns (1.5x1.5 cm) covering 20% of total body area, were induced under anesthesia on the back of mice by controlled burning and gastric lesions were assessed 1, 2, 3, 7, 14 and 21 days following injury. The first application of BPC 157 was immediately following burning, and thereafter, once daily, until 24 h before sacrifice. In the initial experiments, exposure to direct flame for 5 s, the BPC 157 was applied at 10 microg or 10 ng/kg b.w. intraperitoneally (i.p.) by injection or alternatively, topically, at the burn, as a thin layer of cream (50 microg of BPC 157 dissolved in 2 ml of distilled water was mixed with 50 g of commercial neutral cream (also used as local vehicle-control)), while silver sulfadiazine 1% cream was a standard agent acting locally. Others received no local medication: they were treated i.p. by injection of distilled water (distilled water-control) or left without any medication (control). In subsequent experiments involving deeper burns (direct flame for 7 s), BPC 157 creams (50 microg, 5 microg, 500 ng, 50 ng or 5 ng of BPC 157 dissolved in 2 ml of distilled water was mixed with 50 g of commercial neutral cream), or vehicle as a thin layer of cream, were applied topically, at the burn. Compared with untreated controls, in both experiments, in the BPC 157 cream-treated mice all parameters of burn healing were improved throughout the experiment: less edema was observed and inflammatory cell numbers decreased. Less necrosis was seen with an increased number of capillaries along with an advanced formation of dermal reticulin and collagen fibers. An increased number of preserved follicles were observed. Two weeks after injury, BPC 157 cream-treated mice completely reversed the otherwise poor re-epithelization ratio noted in the untreated control or mice treated with vehicle only. Tensiometry investigation showed an increased breaking strength and relative elongation of burned skin, while water content in burned skin decreased. This was, however, not the case with the vehicle or silver sulfadiazine. Relative to the control values, in silver sulfadiazine cream-treated mice, only collagen fiber formation was increased, in addition to a decreased inflammatory cell number. Relative to control values, BPC 157 given i.p. decreased the number of inflammatory cells, lowered water content in burned skin, and raised breaking strength and relative elongation of burned skin during tensiometry. Through the experimental period, gastric lesions were continuously noted in all thermally injured mice left without local medication and they were consistently attenuated only by BPC 157 treatments: either given i.p. (at either dose), or given locally (at either concentration). Other treatments (i.e. local treatment with silver sulfadiazine cream or neutral cream in mice subjected for 5 s to direct flame), led to only poor, if any attenuation. This stable gastric pentadecapeptide appears to be active and gives a stimulation to burn healing at the defect site. The agent may act by causing an upregulation of the growth factors, as well as influencing other local factors.


Journal of Physiology-paris | 1997

BPC 157's effect on healing

Sven Seiwerth; Predrag Sikiric; Zeljko Grabarevic; Ivan Zoricic; Miroslav Hanzevacki; D Ljubanovic; V Coric; Paško Konjevoda; Marijan Petek; Rudolf Rucman; Branko Turkovic; Darko Perovic; Darko Mikus; S Jandrijevic; M Medvidovic; T Tadic; B Romac; J Kos; J Peric; Z Kolega

The 15 amino acid agent BPC 157, showing a wide range of organoprotective action in different experimental models, was used in our experiments in order to establish its influence on different elements connected with the healing process. Elements thought to be of greatest importance in the process of healing are formation of granulation tissue, angiogenesis and production of collagen. In our work we tested the influence of BPC 157 on: granulation tissue and collagen formation, on angiogenesis as well as on tensile strength development, using three experimental rat models: 1) skin incisional wounds; 2) colon-colon anastomoses; and 3) angiogenesis model with synthetic sponge implantation. The specimens were histologically assessed for collagen, reticulin and blood vessels using scoring and morphometry. In all experiments significant differences between BPC 157-treated animals and controls were found, showing a strong, promoting involvement of BPC in the healing process. It is worth noting that these effects were achieved by different routes of application, including intragastric and local, making BPC 157 a potentially useful therapeutic agent.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2003

Gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 accelerates healing of transected rat Achilles tendon and in vitro stimulates tendocytes growth

Mario Staresinic; Bozidar Sebecic; Leonardo Patrlj; S. Jadrijevic; Slaven Suknaić; Darko Perovic; Gorana Aralica; N. Zarkovic; S. Borovic; M. Srdjak; K. Hajdarevic; M. Kopljar; Lovorka Batelja; Alenka Boban-Blagaic; I. Turcic; Tomislav Anic; Sven Seiwerth; Predrag Sikiric

In studies intended to improve healing of transected Achilles tendon, effective was a stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (GEPPPGKPADDAGLV, M.W. 1419). Currently in clinical trials for inflammatory bowel disease (PLD‐116, PL 14736, Pliva), it ameliorates internal and external wound healing. In rats, the right Achilles tendon transected (5 mm proximal to its calcaneal insertion) presents with a large tendon defect between cut ends. Agents (/kg b.w., i.p., once time daily) (BPC 157 (dissolved in saline, with no carrier addition) (10 μg, 10 ng or 10 pg) or saline (5.0 ml)), were firstly applied at 30 min after surgery, the last application at 24 h before autopsy. Achilles functional index (AFI) was assessed once time daily. Biomechanical, microscopical and macroscopical assessment was on day 1, 4, 7, 10 and 14. Controls generally have severely compromised healing. In comparison, pentadecapeptide BPC 157 fully improves recovery: (i) biomechanically, increased load of failure, load of failure per area and Youngs modulus of elasticity; (ii) functionally, significantly higher AFI‐values; (iii) microscopically, more mononuclears and less granulocytes, superior formation of fibroblasts, reticulin and collagen; (iv) macroscopically, smaller size and depth of tendon defect, and subsequently the reestablishment of full tendon integrity. Likewise, unlike TGF‐β, pentadecapeptide BPC 157, presenting with no effect on the growth of cultured cell of its own, consistently opposed 4‐hydroxynonenal (HNE), a negative modulator of the growth. HNE‐effect is opposed in both combinations: BPC 157 + HNE (HNE growth inhibiting effect reversed into growth stimulation of cultured tendocytes) and HNE + BPC 157(abolished inhibiting activity of the aldehyde), both in the presence of serum and serum deprived conditions. In conclusion, these findings, particularly. Achilles tendon transection fully recovered in rats, peptide stability suitable delivery, usefully favor gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 in future Achilles tendon therapy.


Journal of Physiology-paris | 1997

Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 positively affects both non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agent-induced gastrointestinal lesions and adjuvant arthritis in rats

P Sikiric; Sven Seiwerth; Zeljko Grabarevic; Rudolf Rucman; Marijan Petek; Vjekoslav Jagić; Branko Turkovic; Ivo Rotkvic; Stjepan Mise; Ivan Zoricic; Paško Konjevoda; Darko Perovic; Velimir Šimičević; Jadranka Separovic; Miroslav Hanzevacki; Danica Ljubanović; Branka Artuković; Mirna Bratulić; Marina Tišljar; B Rekic; Miroslav Gjurasin; Pavle Miklic; Gojko Buljat

Besides a superior protection of the pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (an essential fragment of an organoprotective gastric juice peptide BPC) against different gastrointestinal and liver lesions, an acute anti-inflammatory and analgetic activity was also noted. Consequently, its effect on chronic inflammation lesions, such as adjuvant arthritis, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents (NSAIAs)-induced gastrointestinal lesions was simultaneously studied in rats. In gastrointestinal lesions (indomethacin (30 mg/kg s.c.), aspirin (400 mg/kg i.g.) and diclofenac (125 mg/kg i.p.) studies, BPC 157 (10 micrograms or 10 ng/kg i.p.) was regularly given simultaneously and/or 1 h prior to drug application (indomethacin). In the adjuvant arthritis (tail-application of 0.2 mL of Freunds adjuvant) studies (14 days, 30 days, 1 year) BPC 157 (10 micrograms or 10 ng/kg i.p.), it was given as a single application (at 1 h either before or following the application of Freunds adjuvant) or in a once daily regimen (0-14th day, 14-30th day, 14th day-1 year). Given with the investigated NSAIAs, BPC 157 consistently reduced the otherwise prominent lesions in the stomach of the control rats, as well as the lesions in the small intestine in the indomethacin groups. In the adjuvant arthritis studies, the lesions development seems to be considerably reduced after single pentadecapeptide medication, and even more attenuated in rats daily treated with BPC 157. As a therapy of already established adjuvant arthritis, its salutary effect consistently appeared already after 2 weeks of medication and it could be clearly seen also after 1 year of application. Taking together all these results, the data likely point to a special anti-inflammatory and mucosal integrity protective effect.


Bone | 1999

Osteogenic effect of a gastric pentadecapeptide, BPC-157, on the healing of segmental bone defect in rabbits: a comparison with bone marrow and autologous cortical bone implantation

Božidar Šebečić; V Nikolić; P Sikiric; Sven Seiwerth; Tomislav Šoša; Leonardo Patrlj; Željko Grabarević; Rudolf Rucman; Marijan Petek; Paško Konjevoda; Stipislav Jadrijević; Darko Perovic; M Šlaj

Gastrectomy often results in increased likelihood of osteoporosis, metabolic aberration, and risk of fracture, and there is a need for a gastric peptide with osteogenic activity. A novel stomach pentadecapeptide, BPC-157, improves wound and fracture healing in rats in addition to having an angiogenic effect. Therefore, in the present study, using a segmental osteoperiosteal bone defect (0.8 cm, in the middle of the left radius) that remained incompletely healed in all control rabbits for 6 weeks (assessed in 2 week intervals), pentadecapeptide BPC-157 was further studied (either percutaneously given locally [10 microg/kg body weight] into the bone defect, or applied intramuscularly [intermittently, at postoperative days 7, 9, 14, and 16 at 10 microg/kg body weight] or continuously [once per day, postoperative days 7-21 at 10 microg or 10 ng/kg body weight]). For comparison, rabbits percutaneously received locally autologous bone marrow (2 mL, postoperative day 7). As standard treatment, immediately after its formation, the bone defect was filled with an autologous cortical graft. Saline-treated (2 mL intramuscularly [i.m.] and 2 mL locally into the bone defect), injured animals were used as controls. Pentadecapeptide BPC-157 significantly improved the healing of segmental bone defects. For instance, upon radiographic assessment, the callus surface, microphotodensitometry, quantitative histomorphometry (10 microg/kg body weight i.m. for 14 days), or quantitative histomorphometry (10 ng/kg body weight i.m. for 14 days) the effect of pentadecapeptide BPC-157 was shown to correspond to improvement after local application of bone marrow or autologous cortical graft. Moreover, a comparison of the number of animals with unhealed defects (all controls) or healed defects (complete bony continuity across the defect site) showed that besides pentadecapeptide intramuscular application for 14 days (i.e., local application of bone marrow or autologous cortical graft), also following other pentadecapeptide BPC-157 regimens (local application, or intermittent intramuscular administration), the number of animals with healed defect was increased. Hopefully, in the light of the suggested stomach significance for bone homeostasis, the possible relevance of this pentadecapeptide BPC-157 effect (local or intramuscular effectiveness, lack of unwanted effects) could be a basis for methods of choice in the future management of healing impairment in humans, and requires further investigation.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1997

Pentadecapeptide BPC 157, Cimetidine, Ranitidine, Bromocriptine, and Atropine Effect in Cysteamine Lesions in Totally Gastrectromized Rats (A Model for Cytoprotective Studies)

Predrag Sikiric; Darko Mikus; Sven Seiwerth; Zeljko Grabarevic; J Peric; Paško Konjevoda; Darko Perovic; Ljubica Jurina; Stipislav Jadrijević; Nikola Jelovac; Pavao Miklić; Gojko Buljat; Rudolf Rucman; Marijan Petek; Vjekoslav Jagić; Branko Turkovic; Ivo Rotkvic; Stjepan Mise; Ivan Zoricic; Miro Hanzevacki; Jadranka Separovic; Miroslav Gjurasin; Anton Marovic

A superior effectiveness in various lesionassays was noted for the novel pentadecapeptide BPC 157,originated from human gastric juice protein (BPC) andclaimed to be a cytoprotective agent. From this viewpoint, as a previously untreatedexperimental improvement to create an acid-freeenvironmental for cytoprotection studies, totalgastrectomy was done 24 hr before the ulcerogenicprocedure. In the absence of stomach and gastric acid, the damagingeffects of cysteamine (400 mg/kg subcutaneously, death24 hr thereafter), to date thought to be an acid-relatedduodenal ulcerogen, and the BPC 157 cytoprotective effect (10 mug or 10 ng/kg intraperitoneally)were further challenged. BPC 157 was compared withreference agents [cimetidine (50), ranitidine (10),omeprazole (10), bromocriptine (10) and atropine (10) (mg/kg intraperitoneally, 1 hr beforecysteamine] known to be also cytoprotective. In naiverats, with intact stomach, all of them showed a strongbeneficial effect. Interestingly, in gastrectomizedanimals, the application of BPC 157 or the referenceagents before cysteamine significantly prevented theotherwise severe duodenal lesion development noted inthe control gastrectomized cysteamine rats. In groups without cysteamine, no lesions were noted(laparotomy, gastrectomy only, 24 or 48 hr postsurgicalperiod), nor was lesion potentiation seen incysteamine-treated laparotomized animals. In summary,these findings -- equal damaging effect ofcysteamine and equal protection of pentadecapeptide BPC157 and reference agents in gastrectomized and rats withintact stomach -- seem to be particularly relevantfor a cytoprotective viewpoint. Without a stomach,the cysteamine damaging effect was convincingly definedas an essential gastric acid-independent injury(analogous to ethanol gastric lesions). Likewise, a high “cytoprotective capacity,”apparently acid independent, common for all testedagents (novel pentadecapeptide BPC 157, cimetidine,ranitidine, omeprazole and atropine) could be clearlystressed.


Biological Psychiatry | 1998

A novel pentadecapeptide, BPC 157, blocks the stereotypy produced acutely by amphetamine and the development of haloperidol-induced supersensitivity to amphetamine

Nikola Jelovac; Predrag Sikiric; Rudolf Rucman; Marijan Petek; Darko Perovic; Paško Konjevoda; Anton Marovic; Sven Seiwerth; eljko Grabarević; Jagoda Sumajstorčić; Goran Dodig; J Peric

BACKGROUND A novel gastric pentadecapeptide, BPC 157, has been shown to attenuate different lesions (i.e., gastrointestinal tract, liver, pancreas, somatosensory neurons). This suggests an interaction with the dopamine system. When used alone, BPC 157 does not affect gross behavior or induce stereotypy. METHODS We first investigated the effect of pentadecapeptide BPC 157 on stereotypy and acoustic startle response in rats, given as either a prophylactic (10 micrograms/kg i.p.) or therapeutic (10 ng/kg i.p.) regimen, with the dopamine indirect agonist amphetamine (10 mg/kg i.p.). RESULTS There was a marked attenuation of stereotypic behavior and acoustic startle response. When the medication was given at the time of maximum amphetamine-induced excitability, there was a reversal of this behavior. A further focus was on the effect of this pentadecapeptide on increased climbing behavior in mice pretreated with the dopamine antagonist haloperidol (5.0 mg/kg i.p.), and subsequently treated with amphetamine (20 mg/kg i.p. challenge 1, 2, 4, and 10 days after haloperidol pretreatment). This protocol is usually used for the study of behavioral supersensitivity to the amphetamine stimulating effect. CONCLUSIONS An almost complete reversal was noted when pentadecapeptide was coadministered with haloperidol. Together, these data provide compelling evidence for the interaction of pentadecapeptide BPC 157 with the dopamine system.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 1999

Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 attenuates disturbances induced by neuroleptics: the effect on catalepsy and gastric ulcers in mice and rats

Nikola Jelovac; Predrag Sikiric; Rudolf Rucman; Marijan Petek; Anton Marovic; Darko Perovic; Sven Seiwerth; Stjepan Mise; Branko Turkovic; Goran Dodig; Pavle Miklic; Gojko Buljat; Ingrid Prkačin

A gastric pentadecapeptide, BPC 157, with the amino acid sequence, Gly-Glu-Pro-Pro-Pro-Gly-Lys-Pro-Ala-Asp-Asp-Ala-Gly-Leu-Val, MW 1419, known to have a variety of protective effects in gastrointestinal tract and other organs, was recently shown to particularly affect dopamine systems. For instance, it blocks the stereotypy produced acutely by amphetamine in rats, and the development of haloperidol-induced supersensitivity to amphetamine in mice. Consequently, whether pentadecapeptide BPC 157, that by itself has no cataleptogenic effect in normal animals, may attenuate the immediate effects of neuroleptics application, particularly catalepsy, was the focus of the present report. Prominent catalepsy, otherwise consistently seen in the mice treated with haloperidol (0.625, 1.25, 2.5, 5.0 and 10.0 mg/kg b.w., i.p.) and fluphenazine (0.3125, 0.625, 1.25, 2.5 and 5.0 mg/kg b.w., i.p.) after 1.5, 3, 4.5, 6 and 7.5 h following administration, was markedly attenuated when pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (10 microg or 10 ng/kg b.w., i.p.) was coadministered with the neuroleptic. The number of cataleptic mice was markedly lower throughout most of the experimental period. Moreover, on challenge with lower doses of neuroleptics, catalepsy appearance was postponed and the mice, otherwise cataleptic since the earliest period, became cataleptic later, not before 3 or 4.5 h after neuroleptic administration, especially if protected with higher pentadecapeptide dose. Besides catalepsy, coadministration of the pentadecapeptide BPC 157, given in the above mentioned doses, reduced not only catalepsy but somatosensory disorientation (for 7.5 h after administration of a neuroleptic, assessed at intervals of 1.5 h, by a simple scoring system [0-5]) in haloperidol- or fluphenazine-challenged mice as it did in mice treated with sulpiride (20, 40, 80 and 160 mg/kg b.w., i.p.) or with clozapine (25, 50 and 100 mg/kg b.w., i.p.), in which case catalepsy was absent. In other experiments, considering the gastric origin of this pentadecapeptide, the focus was shifted to the evidence that a dose of haloperidol, cataleptogenic due to dopamine receptors blockade, induces gastric ulcers in rats. Coadministration of pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (10 microg, 10 ng, 1.0 ng, 100 pg/kg b.w., i.p.) to rats completely inhibited the lesions otherwise regularly evident 24 h after haloperidol (5.0 mg/kg b.w., i.p.) in control rats (18 of 20 rats had gastric lesions). This activity accompanied the antagonism of the haloperidol catalepsy in rats (assessed at 60-min intervals from I to 5 h after haloperidol), when 10-microg- or 10-ng regimens were given (lower doses could not influence catalepsy). Together, these findings indicate that pentadecapeptide BPC 157 fully interacts with the dopamine system, both centrally and peripherally, or at least, that BPC 157 interferes with some steps involved in catalepsy and/or ulcer formation.


Journal of Physiology-paris | 1999

A behavioural study of the effect of pentadecapeptide BPC 157 in Parkinson's disease models in mice and gastric lesions induced by 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine

Predrag Sikiric; Anton Marovic; Wendy Matoz; Tomislav Anic; Gojko Buljat; Darko Mikus; Dinko Stančić-Rokotov; Jadranka Separovic; Sven Seiwerth; Zeljko Grabarevic; Rudolf Rucman; Marijan Petek; Tomislav Ziger; Božidar Šebečić; Ivan Zoricic; Branko Turkovic; Gorana Aralica; Darko Perovic; Božidar Duplančić; Martina Lovric-Bencic; Ivo Rotkvic; Stjepan Mise; Vjekoslav Jagić; Vladimir Hahn

The effect of a stomach pentadecapeptide, BPC 157, on Parkinsons disease in mice was investigated, along with its salutary activity on stomach lesions induced by parkinsongenic agents. Parkinsongenic agents, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) (30.0 mg x kg(-1)b.w. i.p. once daily for 6d, and after 4d once 50.0 mg x kg(-1)b.w. i.p.) or reserpine (5.0 mg x kg(-1)b.w. i.p.) were applied i.p. BPC 157 (1.50 microg or 15.0 ng x kg(-1)b.w. i.p.) was applied 15 min before or alternatively 15 min after each MPTP administration. In reserpine studies, BPC 157 (10.0 microg or 10.0 ng x kg(-1)b.w. i.p.) was given either 15 min before reserpine or in the already established complete catalepsy 24 h thereafter. BPC 157 strongly improved the MPTP-impaired somatosensory orientation and reduced the MPTP-induced hyperactivity, and most importantly, MPTP-motor abnormalities (tremor, akinesia, catalepsy -otherwise very prominent in saline control), leading to almost complete abolition of otherwise regularly lethal course of MPTP treatment in controls. Likewise, in reserpine experiments, BPC 157 strongly prevented the development of otherwise very prominent catalepsy and when applied 24 h thereafter reversed the established catalepsy. In addition, a reduction of reserpine-hypothermy (BPC 157 pre-treatment) and reversal of further prominent temperature fall (BPC 157 post-treatment) have been consistently observed. Taking together these data, as the two most suitable animal models were consistently used and since the high effectiveness was demonstrated in pre- and post-treatment, microg and ng regimens, BPC 157 as an organoprotector should be further therapeutically investigated. Additionally, given in either regimen, pentadecapeptide BPC 157 strongly attenuated the stomach lesions in mice that otherwise consistently appeared in mice treated with the parkinsogenic neurotoxin MPTP.

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