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DSIP — Canada Research Brief

By Dr. Elena Morozova, PhDReviewed by Dr. Elena Morozova, PhDPublished April 11, 2026Last reviewed April 11, 20261 min read
Quick answer

DSIP (Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide) is a naturally occurring nine-amino-acid neuromodulator first isolated from sleeping-rabbit cerebral venous blood in 1977, studied preclinically for sleep and stress responses.

Key facts

Canonical nameDSIP
Alternate namesDelta sleep-inducing peptide
Drug classNonapeptide neuromodulator (sleep / stress research)
CAS number62568-57-4
Molecular formulaC35H48N10O15
Molecular weight848.81 g/mol
SequenceTrp-Ala-Gly-Gly-Asp-Ala-Ser-Gly-Glu
COA pending
Research product
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Discovery

DSIP was isolated by Monnier, Schoenenberger and colleagues at the University of Basel in 1977 through a classic neurophysiology experiment: blood taken from the cerebral venous sinuses of rabbits during electrically induced delta sleep, concentrated, and infused into recipient animals. The recipients subsequently showed increased slow-wave EEG activity — and the responsible factor turned out to be this nine-residue peptide.

That isolation method is part of what makes DSIP a historically interesting but mechanistically awkward target: the discovery predated molecular receptor pharmacology, and decades later the primary receptor remains uncharacterised.

Research profile

Graf and Kastin's 1984 review in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews remains the most comprehensive summary of DSIP's preclinical profile. Reported effects include:

  • Modulation of delta-wave sleep EEG in rodent models.
  • Anti-stress effects in a variety of physical and psychological stress paradigms.
  • Endocrine effects on cortisol, ACTH, and somatotropin release in some protocols.
  • Anti-nociceptive effects in certain pain models.

The persistent challenge is the absence of a confirmed receptor — which makes dose-response work difficult and means mechanistic claims rely on downstream readouts rather than direct pharmacology.

Storage

Store lyophilised DSIP at −20°C protected from light. Reconstituted peptide is stable refrigerated at 2–8°C for approximately 2–4 weeks.

Frequently asked questions

What is DSIP?
DSIP (Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide) is a naturally occurring nine-amino-acid peptide first isolated by Monnier and Schoenenberger in 1977 from the cerebral venous blood of rabbits in slow-wave (delta) sleep. It was named for its ability to promote delta-wave EEG activity when infused into recipient rabbits.
Does DSIP actually induce sleep in humans?
Early studies were mixed. While some small trials reported reductions in sleep latency and improvements in sleep quality in insomniacs, results did not hold up consistently in larger samples, and no approved DSIP product exists. DSIP remains a research-grade neuropeptide rather than a validated clinical sleep agent.
What is DSIP's receptor?
DSIP has no confirmed receptor. It is one of the few neuropeptides where downstream effects are well-documented in preclinical work but the primary binding site remains unidentified. This has limited mechanism-focused research and complicates rigorous pharmacological characterisation.
What is DSIP's molecular weight?
DSIP has a molecular weight of 848.81 g/mol, a molecular formula of C35H48N10O15, and CAS number 62568-57-4. Its sequence is Trp-Ala-Gly-Gly-Asp-Ala-Ser-Gly-Glu.

References

  1. [1]Graf MV, Kastin AJ. Delta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP) — A review. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 1984. PMID: 6132341
  2. [2]Wikipedia contributors. Delta sleep-inducing peptide — Wikipedia, 2024
  3. [3]National Center for Biotechnology Information. PubChem CID 68815 — DSIP, 2024

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