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GHRP-2

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

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 3
1998 pubmed

Specific receptors for synthetic GH secretagogues in the human brain and pituitary gland.

Muccioli. G G; Ghè. C C; Ghigo. M C MC; Papotti. M M; Arvat. E E; Boghen. M F MF; Nilsson. M H MH; Deghenghi. R R; Ong. H H; Ghigo. E E

Key Findings

  • Radiolabelled GHRP‑2 (as Tyr‑Ala‑hexarelin) binds strongly to membranes from pituitary and hypothalamus with nanomolar affinity (Kd ≈ 1.5‑2.1 × 10⁻âč M).
  • Binding sites are also present in choroid plexus, cortex, hippocampus and medulla, but are minimal in thalamus, striatum, cerebellum, etc.
  • Binding is specific: it is displaced by other synthetic GHS peptides (GHRP‑2, GHRP‑6, hexarelin, MK‑0677) but not by unrelated neuropeptides like GHRH or somatostatin.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this confirms that GHRP‑2 likely works through central receptors, supporting its use for GH‑boosting protocols that aim to affect brain‑related outcomes (e.g., sleep, mood, cognition). However, the data are from in‑vitro membranes, so dosing or safety implications remain unchanged; it mainly validates the mechanistic rationale rather than providing new dosage guidance.

Summary

The study shows that synthetic growth‑hormone secretagogues like GHRP‑2 bind to specific high‑affinity receptors in the human pituitary and several brain areas, especially the hypothalamus. This suggests these peptides can act directly in the brain, not just on the pituitary, and may influence GH release and possibly other brain functions.

Abstract

In vitro studies have been performed to demonstrate and characterize specific binding sites for synthetic GH secretagogues (sGHS) on membranes from pituitary gland and different human brain regions. A binding assay for sGHS was established using a peptidyl sGHS (Tyr-Ala-hexarelin) which had been radioiodinated to high specific activity at the Tyr residue. Specific binding sites for 125I-labelled Tyr-Ala-hexarelin were detected mainly in membranes isolated from pituitary gland and hypothalamus, but they were also present in other brain areas such as choroid plexus, cerebral cortex, hippocampus and medulla oblongata with no sex-related differences. In contrast, negligible binding was found in the thalamus, striatum, substantia nigra, cerebellum and corpus callosum. The binding of 125I-labelled Tyr-Ala-hexarelin to membrane-binding sites is a saturable and reversible process, depending on incubation time and pH of the buffer. Scatchard analysis of the binding revealed a finite number of binding sites in the hypothalamus and pituitary gland with a dissociation constant (Kd) of (1.5 +/- 0.3) x 10(-9) and (2.1 +/- 0.4) x 10(-9) mol/l respectively. Receptor activity is sensitive to trypsin and phospholipase C digestion, suggesting that protein and phospholipids are essential for the binding of 125I-labelled Tyr-Ala-hexarelin. The binding of 125I-labelled Tyr-Ala-hexarelin to pituitary and hypothalamic membranes was displaced in a dose-dependent manner by different unlabelled synthetic peptidyl (Tyr-Ala-hexarelin, GHRP2, hexarelin, GHRP6) and non-peptidyl (MK 0677) sGHS. An inhibition of the specific binding was also observed when binding was performed in the presence of [D-Arg1-D-Phe5-D-Trp7,9-Leu11]-substance P, a substance P antagonist that has been found to inhibit GH release in response to sGHS. In contrast, no competition was observed in the presence of other neuropeptides (GHRH, somatostatin, galanin or Met-enkephalin) which have a known influence on GH release. In conclusion, the present data demonstrate that sGHS have specific receptors in human brain and pituitary gland and reinforce the hypothesis that these compounds could be the synthetic counterpart of an endogenous GH secretagogue involved in the neuroendocrine control of GH secretion and possibly in other central activities.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1998

DOI

10.1677/joe.0.1570099