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GHK-Cu

Copper Tripeptide-1, Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine Copper, Prezatide Copper

Quick Stats
Studies 149
Trials 1
Score 1
1996 pubmed 13 citations

Human thyroid epithelial cells cultured in monolayers. II. Influence of serum on thyroglobulin and cAMP production.

Rasmussen. A K AK; Kayser. L L; Perrild. H H; Brandt. M M; Bech. K K; Feldt-Rasmussen. U U

Key Findings

  • Serum is needed for thyroid cells to attach to the dish but high serum levels suppress thyroid‑specific functions (cAMP and thyroglobulin production).
  • Thyrotropin (TSH) still boosts cell growth and hormone production even when serum is low.
  • Adding GHK‑Cu and other supplements at normal concentrations did not alter the serum‑dependent effects.
  • The presence of IBMX changes how TSH influences hormone production, but serum still dampens the response.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study suggests that components in blood serum can blunt thyroid cell activity in a lab setting, but it doesn’t provide actionable guidance for using GHK‑Cu in humans. There’s no evidence here that GHK‑Cu improves thyroid function or metabolism, so it’s not a useful protocol change for longevity or performance goals.

Summary

Scientists grew human thyroid cells in a dish and tested how serum and a few supplements, including the peptide GHK‑Cu, affected the cells' growth and hormone‑related activity. They found that higher amounts of serum (the liquid part of blood) made the cells stick better but actually reduced the cells' ability to produce thyroid hormone precursors and signaling molecules, and the added supplements didn’t change this effect.

Abstract

An in vitro system of secondary cultures of human thyroid follicular epithelial cells in monolayer is described. The 72-h influence of serum and six supplements (thyrotropin, insulin, somatostatin, transferrin, hydrocortisone, glycyl-histidyl-lysine acetate) on growth and function in presence of 3-isobutyl-L-methyl-xanthine (IBMX) was investigated. The function of the cells was evaluated by production of the second messenger adenylate cyclase (cAMP) and the end product thyroglobulin (Tg). Growth was measured as the 3H-thymidine uptake of the cells. Three days of TSH-depletion preceeded the experiments. In presence of IBMX TSH stimulated cAMP production, while stimulation of Tg was only present in some cultures. In absence of IBMX TSH always stimulated the Tg production. The stimulation was independent of the presence of the other five investigated nutritional factors in physiological concentrations. TSH in concentrations from 0.1-10 U/1 stimulated the 72ih 3H-thymidine uptake of the cells. The TSH-stimulated production of Tg and cAMP decreased significantly with increasing concentrations of fetal calf serum (0-10%), (tau = 0.49, P < 0.001, n = 6-29 and tau = 0.75, P < 0.001, n = 6-29, respectively). Thus, serum as a complex, variable and not fully characterized mixture of hormones and growth factors was crucial to the attachment of the cells to the substrate, but inhibited differentiated functions of the human thyroid cells.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1996

Date

1996-02-05T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/0303-7207(95)03712-8

Citations

13

References

27