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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
2007 pubmed 8 citations

Identification of the atypical L-type Ca2+ channel blocker diltiazem and its metabolites as ghrelin receptor agonists.

Ma. Jian-Nong JN; Schiffer. Hans H HH; Knapp. Anne E AE; Wang. Jean J; Wong. Kenneth K KK; Currier. Erika A EA; Owens. Michelle M; Nash. Norman R NR; Gardell. Luis R LR; Brann. Mark R MR; Olsson. Roger R; Burstein. Ethan S ES

Key Findings

  • Diltiazem acts as a partial agonist at the ghrelin (GHSR1a) receptor, with 50‑80% of the effect of GHRP‑6 in cell assays.
  • Three diltiazem metabolites (M2, M1, MA) are even more potent or efficacious at the ghrelin receptor than the parent drug.
  • Both diltiazem and its most active metabolite (M2) stimulate growth hormone release in neonatal rats, though less strongly than GHRP‑6.

Practical Outcomes

  • The finding hints that diltiazem might have mild GH‑boosting side effects, but because it is a prescription calcium‑channel blocker with cardiovascular actions, it isn’t a safe or reliable substitute for dedicated ghrelin‑mimetic peptides. Biohackers should not adopt diltiazem for GH or performance purposes without medical supervision.

Summary

Researchers found that the blood pressure drug diltiazem and some of its breakdown products can weakly activate the same receptor that the peptide GHRP‑6 targets, leading to a modest increase in growth hormone release in rats.

Abstract

Using a high-throughput functional screen, the atypical L-type Ca2+ channel blocker diltiazem was discovered to be an agonist at the human ghrelin (GHSR1a) receptor. In cellular proliferation, Ca2+ mobilization, and bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET-2) assays, diltiazem was a partial agonist at GHSR1a receptors, with 50 to 80% relative efficacy compared with the GHSR1a peptide agonist GHRP-6, and high nanomolar to low micromolar potency, depending upon the assay. Seven of the known primary metabolites of diltiazem were synthesized, and three of them (MA, M1, and M2) were more efficacious and/or more potent than diltiazem at GHSR1a receptors, with a rank order of agonist activity of M2 > M1 > MA > diltiazem, whereas M4 and M6 metabolites displayed weak agonist activity, and the M8 and M9 metabolites were inactive. Binding affinities of diltiazem and these metabolites to GHSR1a receptors followed a similar rank order. In vivo tests showed that diltiazem and M2 each stimulated growth hormone release in male Sprague-Dawley neonatal rats, although to a lesser degree than GHRP-6. Thus, diltiazem and chemical analogs of diltiazem represent a new class of GHSR1a receptor agonists. The possible contributions of GHSR1a receptor activation to the clinical actions of diltiazem are discussed in the context of the known beneficial cardiovascular effects of ghrelin.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007

Date

2007-05-02T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1124/mol.107.034298

Citations

8

References

59