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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
2013 pubmed 2 citations

Upregulation of voltage-gated calcium channel cav1.3 in bovine somatotropes treated with ghrelin.

Salinas Zarate. V M VM; Magdaleno Méndez. A A; Domínguez Mancera. B B; Rodríguez Andrade. A A; Barrientos Morales. M M; Cervantes Acosta. P P; Hernández Beltrán. A A; Romero Salas. D D; Flores Hernández. J L V JL; Monjaraz Guzmán. E E; Félix Grijalva. D R DR

Key Findings

  • GHRP‑6 (100 nM) and ghrelin (10 nM) boost GH secretion from bovine somatotropes after 24 h.
  • Blocking L‑type calcium channels (with nifedipine) or CaM‑KII (with KN‑62) stops the GH‑releasing effect, confirming calcium‑channel dependence.
  • Long‑term (72 h) ghrelin/GHRP‑6 treatment selectively increases the density of high‑voltage‑activated (L‑type) calcium currents, mainly by raising the number of Cav1.3 channels in the cell membrane.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers using GHRP‑6 as a GH secretagogue, the data suggest that repeated or chronic dosing might enhance the cell’s calcium‑channel machinery, potentially leading to stronger or more sustained GH release beyond the acute spike. However, the work is done in isolated bovine cells, so human relevance, optimal dosing schedules, and safety of long‑term use remain unproven. Use this insight cautiously and consider that any protocol aiming for chronic exposure should be monitored closely for side effects.

Summary

The study shows that giving ghrelin or the synthetic peptide GHRP‑6 to cow pituitary cells for several days makes them produce more of a specific calcium channel (Cav1.3). This increase lets the cells let more calcium in, which boosts growth‑hormone release. In simple terms, chronic exposure to GHRP‑6 may make the cells that release GH more responsive over time.

Abstract

Activation of the growth hormone (GH) secretagogue receptor (GHS-R) by synthetic GH releasing peptides (GHRP) or its endogenous ligand (Ghrelin) stimulates GH release. Though much is known about the signal transduction underlying short-term regulation, there is far less information on the mechanisms that produce long-term effects. In the current report, using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for GH detection and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings, we assessed the long-term actions of such regulatory factors on voltage-activated Ca(2+) currents in bovine somatotropes (BS) separated on a Percoll gradient and detected by immunohistochemistry. After 24 h of treatment with Ghrelin (10 nM) or GHRP-6 (100 nM) enhanced BS secretory activity; GH secretion stimulated by GHS through the activation of GHS-R because treatment with the antagonist of GHS-R (D-Lys3-GHRP-6, 10 μM) blocked the GH secretion, and the effect was dose and time dependent (24, 48, and 72 h). GH secretion stimulated by GHRP-6 was abolished by nifedipine (0.5 μM), a blocker of L-type HVA Ca(2+) channels, and KN-62 (10 μM), an inhibitor of Ca(2+)/CaM-KII. After 72 h in culture, all recorded BS exhibited two main Ca(2+) currents: a low voltage-activated (LVA; T-type) and a high voltage-activated (HVA; mostly dihydropyridine-sensitive L-type) current. Interestingly, HVA and LVA channels were differentially upregulated by Ghrelin. Chronic treatment with the GHS induced a significant selective increase on the Ba(2+) current through HVA Ca(2+) channels, and caused only a small increase of currents through LVA channels. The stimulatory effect on HVA current density was accompanied by an augment in maximal conductance with no apparent changes in the kinetics and the voltage dependence of the Ca(2+) currents, suggesting an increase in the number of functional channels in the cell membrane. Lastly, in consistency with the functional data, quantitative real-time RT-PCR revealed transcripts encoding for the Cav1.2 and Cav1.3 pore-forming subunits of L-type channels. The treatment with Ghrelin significantly increased the Cav1.3 subunit expression, suggeting that the chronic stimulation of the GHS receptor with Ghrelin or GHRP-6 increases the number of voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels at the cell surface of BS.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-12-18T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1155/2013/527253

Citations

2

References

81