What is DNSP-11 used for?
DNSP-11 is most commonly used for researchers studying Parkinson's disease pathways; neurodegeneration research contexts; educational reference, limited human data. A compound studied to protect the brain cells lost in Parkinson's. An 11-amino-acid peptide from the proGDNF domain (the prodomain of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor, GDNF), also called Dopamine Neuron Stimulating Peptide-11. Pre-clinical neuroprotection for dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's models. Human evidence for DNSP-11 is limited, so these are the goals people pursue with it, not guaranteed outcomes.
What people use DNSP-11 for
- Researchers studying Parkinson's disease pathways
- Neurodegeneration research contexts
- Educational reference, limited human data
References
- Dopamine neuron stimulating actions of a GDNF propeptide — Bradley LH, Fuqua J, Richardson A, et al. (Gerhardt GA group). PLoS One, 2010
- Methodology and effects of repeated intranasal delivery of DNSP-11 in awake Rhesus macaques — Stenslik MJ, Evans A, Pomerleau F, et al. (Gerhardt GA, Bradley LH groups). Journal of Neuroscience Methods, 2018
Pepdex is an editorial reference, not medical advice. Peptides vary in legal and approval status by country, many are research compounds without full human safety data. Talk to a qualified clinician before starting anything.
More on DNSP-11
Last updated 2026-06-15.