GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Kisspeptin Stimulates Growth Hormone Release by Utilizing Neuropeptide Y Pathways and Is Dependent on the Presence of Ghrelin in the Ewe.
Foradori. Chad D CD; Whitlock. Brian K BK; Daniel. Jay A JA; Zimmerman. Arthur D AD; Jones. Melaney A MA; Read. Casey C CC; Steele. Barbara P BP; Smith. Jeremy T JT; Clarke. Iain J IJ; Elsasser. Theodore H TH; Keisler. Duane H DH; Sartin. James L JL
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin causes a robust GH surge in fasted (not fed) sheep.
- The GH surge requires NPY signaling; a Y1‑receptor blocker eliminates the effect.
- Systemic ghrelin is essential—removing ghrelin or blocking its receptor blocks kisspeptin‑induced GH release.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the work hints that GH‑releasing approaches (e.g., GHRP‑6, which mimics ghrelin) may be more effective when ghrelin and NPY activity are high, such as during short‑term fasting. Timing GH secretagogues around meals or fasting could enhance their impact, but the findings are from sheep brain injections, so human protocols should be approached cautiously.
Summary
In fasted sheep, delivering kisspeptin into the brain triggers a strong rise in growth hormone, but only when the animal has ghrelin (the hunger hormone) and active neuropeptide Y (NPY) pathways. Blocking NPY or ghrelin stops this GH increase, showing that short‑term fasting creates a hormonal environment that lets kisspeptin boost GH release.
Abstract
Although kisspeptin is the primary stimulator of gonadotropin-releasing hormone secretion and therefore the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, recent findings suggest kisspeptin can also regulate additional neuroendocrine processes including release of growth hormone (GH). Here we show that central delivery of kisspeptin causes a robust rise in plasma GH in fasted but not fed sheep. Kisspeptin-induced GH secretion was similar in animals fasted for 24 hours and those fasted for 72 hours, suggesting that the factors involved in kisspeptin-induced GH secretion are responsive to loss of food availability and not the result of severe negative energy balance. Pretreatment with the neuropeptide Y (NPY) Y1 receptor antagonist, BIBO 3304, blocked the effects of kisspeptin-induced GH release, implicating NPY as an intermediary. Kisspeptin treatment induced c-Fos in NPY and GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) cells of the arcuate nucleus. The same kisspeptin treatment resulted in a reduction in c-Fos in somatostatin (SS) cells in the periventricular nucleus. Finally, blockade of systemic ghrelin release or antagonism of the ghrelin receptor eliminated or reduced the ability of kisspeptin to induce GH release, suggesting the presence of ghrelin is required for kisspeptin-induced GH release in fasted animals. Our findings support the hypothesis that during short-term fasting, systemic ghrelin concentrations and NPY expression in the arcuate nucleus rise. This permits kisspeptin activation of NPY cells. In turn, NPY stimulates GHRH cells and inhibits SS cells, resulting in GH release. We propose a mechanism by which kisspeptin conveys reproductive and hormone status onto the somatotropic axis, resulting in alterations in GH release.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-10-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/en.2017-00303
25
88