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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
2016 pubmed 14 citations

Ginkgoghrelins, unique acylated flavonoid diglycosides in Folium Ginkgo, stimulate growth hormone secretion via activation of the ghrelin receptor.

Hsieh. Sheng-Kuo SK; Chung. Tse-Yu TY; Li. Yue-Chiun YC; Lo. Yuan-Hao YH; Lin. Nan-Hei NH; Kuo. Ping-Chung PC; Chen. Wen-Ying WY; Tzen. Jason T C JT

Key Findings

  • Two acylated flavonoid diglycosides (ginkgoghrelins) isolated from Ginkgo leaf stimulate growth hormone release in rat pituitary cells.
  • The GH‑releasing effect is blocked by a ghrelin‑receptor inverse agonist, confirming the mechanism involves the ghrelin receptor.
  • Molecular docking shows ginkgoghrelins bind the ghrelin receptor similarly to the synthetic peptide GHRP‑6.

Practical Outcomes

  • Ginkgo leaf extracts might act as a natural, non‑peptide alternative to GHRP‑6 for boosting growth hormone, offering a potential supplement route for biohackers. However, human studies, dosing guidelines, and safety data are still missing, so any use should be experimental and cautious.

Summary

Researchers found two natural compounds in Ginkgo leaf, called ginkgoghrelins, that can make rat pituitary cells release growth hormone, working through the same ghrelin receptor that synthetic GHRP‑6 uses. The effect was dose‑dependent and stopped when a ghrelin‑receptor blocker was added, and computer models show these compounds fit the receptor pocket like GHRP‑6. While promising as a plant‑based way to boost growth hormone, the work is still only in cells and rats, so we don’t yet know the right dose or safety for people.

Abstract

Folium Ginkgo, the dried leaf of Ginkgo biloba L. is a traditional Chinese medicine listed in the Pharmacopoeia of the People's Republic of China with several therapeutic effects, including prevention of aging. It is used as herbal medicine for the treatment of several aging-related diseases. The therapeutic effects of Folium Ginkgo on aging-related diseases are suspected to be similar to the anti-aging effects of growth hormone release induced by ghrelin. Candidate components responsible for the anti-aging effects via the ghrelin receptor-activated pathway were searched from the known compounds found in Folium Ginkgo. Two acylated flavonoid diglycosides, tentatively named ginkgoghrelins in this study, were selected and isolated from the methanol extract of Folium Ginkgo, and their chemical structures were confirmed by spectroscopic analysis. These two compounds were examined for their capability of stimulating growth hormone release of rat primary anterior pituitary cells via activation of the ghrelin receptor. The major metabolites of ginkgoghrelins in rat bile were detected after intravenous injection and structurally analyzed by mass spectroscopy. Molecular modeling of ginkgoghrelins docking to the ghrelin receptor was exhibited to explore the possible interaction within the binding pocket. Similar to growth hormone-releasing hormone-6 (GHRP-6), a synthetic analog of ghrelin, ginkgoghrelins were 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<sup>1</sup>, d-Phe<sup>5</sup>, d-Trp<sup>7,9</sup>, Leu<sup>11</sup>]-substance P, an inverse agonist of the ghrelin receptor. Putative metabolites of ginkgoghrelins via glucuronidation and methylation were detected in bile of rats after intravenous injection. Molecular modeling and docking showed that ginkgoghrelins as well as GHRP-6 could fit in and adequately interact with the binding pocket of the ghrelin receptor. The results suggest that ginkgoghrelins are putative components partly accounting for the anti-aging effects of Folium Ginkgo possibly via activation of the ghrelin receptor, and possess great potential to be developed as non-peptidyl analogs of ghrelin.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-08-12T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.jep.2016.08.015

Citations

14

References

52