Following a simulated stroke in rats, the peptides Semax and its fragment PGP (Pro-Gly-Pro) both boosted the activity of genes encoding neurotrophins - the brain's own growth and survival factors - especially in the hippocampus and frontal cortex. Ischemia on its own sharply reduced neurotrophin gene expression in the hippocampus, and both peptides overcame this reduction with the strongest effects appearing 12 hours after the injury. These results shed light on one of the key ways Semax protects the brain during and after a stroke.
Stavchanskiĭ, V V; Tvorogova, T V; Botsina, A Iu; Skvortsova, V I; Limborskaia, S A; Miasoedov, N F; Dergunova, L V