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GHRP-2

Pralmorelin, Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-2, KP-102

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 1
2014 pubmed 26 citations

In vitro models for metabolic studies of small peptide hormones in sport drug testing.

Esposito. Simone S; Deventer. Koen K; Geldof. Lore L; Van Eenoo. Peter P

Key Findings

  • Human liver microsomes and S9 fractions produce similar peptide metabolites as seen in serum, indicating they are useful in‑vitro models.
  • Both liver and kidney based in‑vitro systems showed comparable metabolic activity for the tested peptides.
  • Deamidation was not observed in these models and required separate testing with α‑chymotrypsin.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the main takeaway is that this research is about detecting peptide misuse, not about improving or safely using GHRP‑2. It doesn’t change dosing, safety, or performance protocols, but it may inform anti‑doping labs about how to spot these substances.

Summary

The study shows that lab tests using human liver microsomes and S9 fractions can mimic how peptide drugs like GHRP‑2 break down in the body, helping scientists spot their use in sports doping. It doesn’t give any tips on how to use the peptide for health or performance.

Abstract

Peptide hormones represent an emerging class of potential doping agents. Detection of their misuse is difficult due to their short half-life in plasma and rapid elimination. Therefore, investigating their metabolism can improve detectability. Unfortunately, pharmacokinetic studies with human volunteers are often not allowed because of ethical constraints, and therefore alternative models are needed. This study was performed in order to evaluate in vitro models (human liver microsomes and S9 fraction) for the prediction of the metabolism of peptidic doping agents and to compare them with the established models. The peptides that were investigated include desmopressin, TB-500, GHRP-2, GHRP-6, hexarelin, LHRH and leuprolide. Several metabolites were detected for each peptide after incubation with human liver microsomes, S9 fraction, and serum, which all showed endopeptidase and exopeptidase activity. In vitro models from different organs (liver vs. kidney) were compared, but no significant differences were recorded. Deamidation was not observed in any of the models and was therefore evaluated by incubation with α-chymotrypsin. In conclusion, in vitro models are useful tools for forensic and clinical analysts to detect peptidic metabolic markers in biological fluids.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-12-03T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/psc.2710

Citations

26

References

20