Obesity is a chronic, costly, and globally prevalent condition, with excess caloric intake a suspected etiologic factor. Nonsurgical treatments are modestly efficacious, and weight loss maintenance is hampered by anti-famine homeostatic mechanisms. Ghrelin, a gastric hormone linked to meal initiation, energy expenditure, and fuel partitioning, is hypothesized to facilitate weight gain and impede weight loss. Unique among known animal peptides, the serine-3 residue of ghrelin is posttranslationally acylated with an n-octanoic acid, a modification important for the peptide's active blood-brain transport and growth hormone secretagogue receptor-1 agonist activity. Pharmacological degradation of ghrelin would be hypothesized to reduce ghrelin's biological effects. To study endogenous ghrelin's role in appetite and energy expenditure, we generated antibodies that hydrolyze the octanoyl moiety of ghrelin to form des-acyl ghrelin. The most proficient antibody catalyst, GHR-11E11, was found to display a second-order rate constant of 18 M ؊ 1⅐s ؊1 for the hydrolysis of ghrelin to des-acyl ghrelin. I.v. administration of GHR-11E11 (50 mg/kg) maintained a greater metabolic rate in fasting C57BL/6J mice as compared with mice receiving a control antibody and suppressed 6-h refeeding after 24 h of food deprivation. Indirect respiratory measures of metabolism after refeeding and relative fuel substrate utilization were unaffected. The results support the hypothesis that acylated ghrelin stimulates appetite and curbs energy expenditure during deficient energy intake, whereas des-acyl ghrelin does not potently share these functions. Catalytic anti-ghrelin antibodies might thereby adjunctively aid consolidation of caloric restrictioninduced weight loss and might also be therapeutically relevant to Prader-Willi syndrome, characterized after infancy by hyperghrelinemia, hyperphagia, and obesity.hormone inactivation ͉ obesity ͉ neuropeptides A pproximately 1 billion people worldwide are overweight or obese (body mass index ϭ 25-29.9 or Ͼ30 kg/m 2 , respectively) (1), conditions associated with significant morbidity and mortality and for which new treatments are needed (2). Among recently characterized molecules implicated in energy homeostasis, ghrelin was identified in 1999 during a search for the endogenous ligand for the GH secretagogue receptor (GHSR) (ghrelin receptor), previously localized to peripheral tissues and to several CNS sites, including the arcuate nucleus and ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (3). Human ghrelin is a 28-amino acid acylated peptide (GSS(n-octanoyl)FLSPEHQRVQQRKESKKPPAKLQPR) released mainly from endocrine cells of the stomach and upper gastrointestinal tract but also expressed in testes, kidney, pituitary, pancreas, lymphocytes, and brain (3-7). Several findings establish gastric ghrelin as an indicator of energy insufficiency and anabolic modulator of energy homeostasis (3). Ghrelin secretion is thought to stimulate food intake, slow metabolic rate, and spare lipid oxidation via central (8) and, possi...