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GHRP-6

Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2

Quick Stats
Studies 702
Trials 0
Score 3
2014 pubmed 19 citations

Emoghrelin, a unique emodin derivative in Heshouwu, stimulates growth hormone secretion via activation of the ghrelin receptor.

Lo. Yuan-Hao YH; Chen. Ying-Jie YJ; Chung. Tse-Yu TY; Lin. Nan-Hei NH; Chen. Wen-Ying WY; Chen. Chung-Yu CY; Lee. Maw-Rong MR; Chou. Chi-Chung CC; Tzen. Jason T C JT

Key Findings

  • Emoghrelin, a unique emodin derivative from raw Heshouwu, stimulates growth hormone secretion in rat pituitary cells in a dose‑dependent manner.
  • No cytotoxic effects were observed for emoghrelin at concentrations ranging from 10⁻⁷ to 10⁻⁎ M.
  • The GH‑releasing effect of emoghrelin is blocked by a ghrelin‑receptor antagonist, confirming it acts via the ghrelin receptor, and molecular docking shows it fits the receptor pocket similarly to GHRP‑6.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, raw Heshouwu or its emoghrelin component could be explored as a natural, non‑peptide alternative to GHRP‑6 for boosting growth hormone, but human data on efficacy, dosing, and safety are lacking. Until more research is done, any use should be experimental and approached with caution.

Summary

Researchers found that a compound called emoghrelin, extracted from raw Heshouwu (a traditional Chinese herb), can trigger growth hormone release in rat pituitary cells, much like the synthetic peptide GHRP‑6. It wasn’t toxic at the tested concentrations and appears to work by binding to the same ghrelin receptor.

Abstract

Heshouwu, the root of Polygonum multiflorum, is an anti-aging Chinese traditional medicine. Fresh (raw) Heshouwu is commonly converted to processed Heshouwu by specialized heating to alleviate its side effects of diarrhea presumably caused by anthraquinones. However, raw Heshouwu has been noted to be better than processed Heshouwu regarding anti-aging effects. The therapeutic effects of raw Heshouwu on aging-related diseases were somehow similar to the anti-aging effects of growth hormone release induced by ghrelin Major ingredients in the methanol extract from raw Heshouwu were separated and identified. Emodin-8-O-(6'-O-malonyl)-glucoside, a unique anthraquinone glycoside known to be completely eliminated in the conversion process of Heshouwu was isolated. This emodin derivative, tentatively named emoghrelin, was examined for its cytotoxicity and capability of stimulating growth hormone release of rat primary anterior pituitary cells via activation of the ghrelin receptor. Moreover, molecular modeling of emoghrelin docking to the ghrelin receptor was exhibited to explore the possible interaction within the binding pocket. No apparent cytotoxicity was observed for emoghrelin of 10(-7)-10(-4)M. Similar to growth hormone-releasing hormone-6 (GHRP-6), a synthetic analog of ghrelin, emoghrelin was demonstrated to stimulate growth hormone secretion of rat primary anterior pituitary cells in a dose dependent manner, and the stimulation was inhibited by [d-Arg(1), d-Phe(5), d-Trp(7,9), Leu(11)]-substance P, an antagonist of the ghrelin receptor. Molecular modeling and docking showed that emoghrelin as well as GHRP-6 could fit in and adequately interact with the binding pocket of the ghrelin receptor. The results suggest that emoghrelin is a key ingredient accounting for the anti-aging effects of Heshouwu, and possesses great potential to be a promising non-peptidyl analog of ghrelin.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-11-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.jep.2014.10.063

Citations

19

References

50