Growth hormone-releasing peptide-2 stimulates GH secretion in GH-deficient patients with mutated GH-releasing hormone receptor.
Gondo. R G RG; Aguiar-Oliveira. M H MH; Hayashida. C Y CY; Toledo. S P SP; Abelin. N N; Levine. M A MA; Bowers. C Y CY; Souza. A H AH; Pereira. R M RM; Santos. N L NL; Salvatori. R R
Key Findings
- GHRP‑2 caused a 4.5‑fold rise in GH in GH‑deficient patients with a mutated GHRH receptor, versus a 79‑fold rise in healthy controls.
- Baseline and post‑dose levels of ACTH, cortisol, prolactin, and TSH remained unchanged in both groups.
- The results indicate that GHRP‑2 can stimulate GH directly at the pituitary level without needing GHRH signaling.
Practical Outcomes
- GHRP‑2 can be used to boost GH even when the GHRH pathway is impaired, but expect only modest increases on its own. For larger GH spikes, pairing GHRP‑2 with a GHRH‑type peptide (e.g., CJC‑1295) may be more effective. The hormone safety profile appears limited, with no acute changes in other pituitary hormones.
Summary
The study shows that the peptide GHRP‑2 can still raise growth hormone (GH) levels even in people who lack a working GHRH receptor, although the increase is much smaller than in normal individuals. Other hormones like ACTH, cortisol, prolactin, and TSH weren’t affected, suggesting a fairly clean hormonal profile.
Abstract
GH-releasing peptides (GHRPs) are synthetic peptides that bind to specific receptors and thereby stimulate the secretion of pituitary GH. In vivo it is uncertain whether these peptides act directly on somatotroph cells or indirectly via release of GHRH from the hypothalamus. In this study we compared the pituitary hormone response to GHRP-2 in 11 individuals with isolated GH deficiency (GHD) due to a homozygous mutation of the GHRH receptor (GHRH-R) gene and in 8 normal unrelated controls. Basal serum GH levels were lower in the GHD group compared with controls [0.11 +/- 0.11 (range, <0.04 to 0.38) vs. 0.59 +/- 0.76 microg/L (range, 0.04-2.12 microg/L); P = 0.052]. After GHRP-2 administration there was a 4.5-fold increase in serum GH relative to baseline values in the GHD group (0.49 +/- 0.41 vs. 0.11 +/- 0.11 microg/L; P = 0.002), which was significantly less than the 79-fold increase in the control group (46.8 +/- 17.6 vs. 0.59 +/- 0.76 microg/L; P = 0.008). Basal and post-GHRP-2 serum levels of ACTH, cortisol, and PRL were similar in both groups. Basal levels of serum TSH were significantly higher in the GHD group than in the control group (3.23 +/- 2.21 vs. 1.37 +/- 0.34 microIU/mL; P = 0.003). TSH levels in both groups did not change after GHRP-2 administration. These results suggest that an intact GHRH signaling system is not an absolute requirement for GHRP-2 action on GH secretion and that GHRP-2 has a GHRH-independent effect on pituitary somatotroph cells.
Study Information
pubmed
2001
10.1210/jcem.86.7.7694