Sleep
DSIP (Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide)
Sleep Research
Endogenous nonapeptide that induces delta (slow-wave) sleep. Modulates stress response, reduces cortisol, normalises circadian disruptions and has potential applications in insomnia and PTSD research.
Amino Acids9
Mol. Weight848.9 Da
Half-Life~30 minutes
Availability
🔔 By Request
Amino Acid Sequence
Trp-Ala-Gly-Gly-Asp-Ala-Ser-Gly-Glu
What Is DSIP?
Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide (DSIP) is an endogenous nonapeptide isolated from rabbit cerebral venous blood in 1977. It selectively promotes slow-wave (delta) sleep and modulates multiple neuroendocrine axes. It crosses the blood-brain barrier and has a broad range of research applications beyond sleep induction.
Key Mechanisms
- Delta wave promotion — selectively increases slow-wave sleep proportion without disrupting REM
- HPA axis modulation — reduces cortisol and stress response; potential PTSD research tool
- GH release stimulation — enhances pulsatile GH secretion during sleep
- Antioxidant activity — reduces lipid peroxidation and free radical damage in CNS
- Circadian rhythm normalisation — resets disrupted sleep-wake cycles
Key References
- Monnier M et al. “Dialysis of sleep and waking factors in blood of the rabbit.” Science, 1977;198:175–177.
- Graf MV et al. “Delta sleep-inducing peptide — a review of its central activity.” Sleep, 1984;7(4):313–329.