GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Pituitary phenotypes of mice lacking the notch signalling ligand delta-like 1 homologue.
Cheung. L Y M LY; Rizzoti. K K; Lovell-Badge. R R; Le Tissier. P R PR
Key Findings
- Dlk1‑null mice are shorter and lighter from birth through adulthood.
- These mice have a lower amount of growth hormone in the pituitary, but the gland’s size and cell composition are unchanged.
- When stimulated, the knockout mice release growth hormone similarly to normal mice, indicating secretion capacity is intact.
Practical Outcomes
- The study provides basic insight into how a genetic factor can affect growth hormone storage, but it offers no direct guidance for using GHRP‑6 or other peptides. For biohackers, it suggests that simply boosting GH release with peptides may not overcome underlying genetic deficits in hormone content.
Summary
Mice that lack the Dlk1 protein are smaller and weigh less because they have less growth hormone stored in their pituitary cells, even though the gland’s size and the number of hormone‑producing cells stay the same. The drop in growth isn’t due to a problem with releasing growth hormone, suggesting other body parts are responsible for the size difference.
Abstract
The Notch signalling pathway ligand delta-like 1 homologue (Dlk1, also named Pref1) is expressed throughout the developing pituitary and becomes restricted to mostly growth hormone (GH) cells within the adult gland. We have investigated the role of Dlk1 in pituitary development and function from late embryogenesis to adulthood using a mouse model completely lacking the expression of Dlk1. We confirm that Dlk1-null mice are shorter and weigh less than wild-type littermates from late gestation, at parturition and in adulthood. A loss of Dlk1 leads to significant reduction in GH content throughout life, whereas other pituitary hormones are reduced to varying degrees depending on sex and age. Both the size of the pituitary and the proportion of hormone-producing cell populations are unchanged, suggesting that there is a reduction in hormone content per cell. In vivo challenge of mutant and wild-type littermates with growth hormone-releasing hormone and growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide shows that reduced GH secretion is unlikely to account for the reduced growth of Dlk1 knockout animals. These data suggest that loss of Dlk1 gives rise to minor pituitary defects manifesting as an age- and sex-dependent reduction in pituitary hormone contents. However, Dlk1 expression in other tissue is most likely responsible for the weight and length differences observed in mutant animals.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-03-21T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/jne.12010
33
47