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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 2
2006 pubmed 9 citations

d-Lys-GHRP-6 does not modify the endocrine response to acylated ghrelin or hexarelin in humans.

Benso. A A; Prodam. F F; Lucatello. B B; Gramaglia. E E; Riganti. F F; Schneider. H H; van der Lely. A J AJ; Muccioli. G G; Ghigo. E E; Broglio. F F

Key Findings

  • D‑Lys‑GHRP‑6 did not reduce the natural or drug‑induced spikes in growth hormone, prolactin, ACTH, or cortisol.
  • Both a single bolus and a continuous infusion of D‑Lys‑GHRP‑6 showed no effect.
  • The peptide failed to block the GH response even when a lower dose of ghrelin was used.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers looking to use D‑Lys‑GHRP‑6 as a ghrelin antagonist, the study suggests it won’t work in humans at the tested doses. It’s not a useful tool for modulating GH or stress‑hormone responses, so you can skip it in protocols aimed at blocking ghrelin’s effects.

Summary

A small study in six healthy people found that giving the peptide D‑Lys‑GHRP‑6 does not block the hormone ghrelin or the synthetic ghrelin‑like drug hexarelin. Even at different doses, it didn’t change the rise in growth hormone, prolactin, ACTH or cortisol that ghrelin normally causes.

Abstract

Acylated ghrelin exerts numerous endocrine and non-endocrine activities via the GH Secretagogue receptor type 1a (GHS-R1a). D-Lys-GHRP-6 has been widely studied in vitro and in vivo in animal studies as GHS-R1a antagonist; its action in humans has, however, never been tested so far. Aim of our study was to verify the antagonistic action of D-Lys-GHRP-6 on the endocrine responses to acylated ghrelin and hexarelin, a peptidyl synthetic GHS, in humans. The effects of different doses of D-Lys-GHRP-6 (2.0microg/kg iv as bolus or 2.0microg/kg/h iv as infusion) on both spontaneous and acylated ghrelin- or hexarelin (1.0microg/kg iv as bolus) -stimulated GH, PRL, ACTH and cortisol levels were studied in six normal volunteers (age [mean+/-SEM]: 25.4+/-1.2yr; BMI: 22.3+/-1.0kg/m(2)). The effects of D-Lys-GHRP-6 (2.0microg/kg iv as bolus+4.0microg/kg/h iv) on the GH response to 0.25microg/kg iv as bolus acylated ghrelin was also studied. During saline, spontaneous ACTH and cortisol decrease was observed while non changes occurred in GH and PRL levels. Acylated ghrelin and hexarelin stimulated (p<0.05) GH, PRL, ACTH and cortisol secretions. D-Lys-GHRP-6 administered either as bolus or a continuous infusion did not modify both spontaneous and acylated ghrelin- or hexarelin-stimulated GH, PRL, ACTH and cortisol secretion. D-Lys-GHRP-6 did not modify even the GH response to 0.25microg/kg iv acylated ghrelin. In conclusion, D-Lys-GHRP-6 does not affect the neuroendocrine response to both ghrelin and hexarelin. These findings question D-Lys-GHRP-6 as an effective GHS-R1a antagonist for human studies.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-11-16T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.npep.2006.10.001

Citations

9

References

28