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Cytoprotective Activities of Gastric Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 in Three Different Cell Lines

Sikiric P, Rucman R, Turkovic B, et al.

World Journal of Gastroenterology/2021/In vitro + animal models
Key Finding

BPC-157 protected gastric, intestinal, and liver cell lines from ethanol, NSAIDs, and oxidative stress damage, with concurrent reversal of GI mucosal injury in rat ulcer models.

Background

This study examined the cytoprotective mechanisms of BPC-157 at the cellular level, complementing prior in vivo animal work with direct cell culture evidence. Three cell lines were evaluated: human gastric adenocarcinoma (AGS), colon cancer (HT-29), and hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) — used as models of normal gastric, intestinal, and liver epithelium respectively.

Methods

In vitro: BPC-157 (0.1, 1.0, 10 ng/mL) applied to cell lines pre- and post-injury with ethanol (5–15%), indomethacin (100–500 μM), and H₂O₂ (50–500 μM). Cell viability, migration, and proliferation assessed.

In vivo: Rat models of alcohol-induced gastric ulcers and indomethacin-induced intestinal lesions, with BPC-157 administered intraperitoneally and intragastrically.

Key Findings

Cell lineAgentBPC-157 effect
AGS (gastric)Ethanol 10%Viability: 71% → 89% at 1 ng/mL
HT-29 (colon)IndomethacinSignificant viability improvement
HepG2 (liver)H₂O₂ 200 μMReduced apoptosis, maintained barrier function
All linesAll agentsEnhanced migration and wound closure in scratch assay

In vivo outcomes:

  • Significant reduction in alcohol-induced gastric lesion area (both preventive and treatment dosing)
  • Indomethacin-induced small intestinal lesions: 60% area reduction with BPC-157

Clinical Significance

This study provides cellular-level mechanistic support for BPC-157’s cytoprotective effects observed in animal models. The gastric and intestinal epithelial protection is particularly relevant for potential clinical applications in inflammatory bowel disease, NSAID-induced GI injury, and leaky gut syndrome.

The multi-pathway protection (oxidative, chemical, anti-inflammatory) suggests BPC-157 acts as a broad cytoprotective agent rather than through a single receptor mechanism.

Limitations

  • Cell lines are cancer-derived; responses may differ from primary normal epithelial cells
  • In vitro concentrations may not reflect achievable tissue concentrations in humans
  • No human pharmacokinetic data for GI tissue bioavailability
  • All studies from the same research group; independent replication needed

Compounds Studied

Related Conditions

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