GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
In vitro and in vivo effects of ghrelin on luteinizing hormone and growth hormone release in goldfish.
Unniappan. Suraj S; Peter. Richard E RE
Key Findings
- Picomolar doses of goldfish ghrelin (gGRL-19 and gGRL-12) stimulate LH and GH release from pituitary cells in vitro.
- Somatostatin-14 blocks ghrelin‑induced GH release, and the GHRP‑6 antagonist blocks ghrelin‑induced LH release but not GH release.
- Injecting ghrelin into fish raises serum LH at 60 min and GH at 15‑30 min after dosing.
Practical Outcomes
- The study shows ghrelin can affect both growth and reproductive hormones in fish, but it does not provide any direct guidance for human use. For biohackers, the findings are mainly of scientific interest and do not translate into actionable dosing or protocols for humans at this time.
Summary
In goldfish, tiny amounts of the hormone ghrelin can make the pituitary gland release both growth hormone (GH) and the reproductive hormone luteinizing hormone (LH). The effect on GH can be stopped by another hormone called somatostatin, while a drug that blocks the ghrelin receptor (GHRP‑6) blocks the LH boost but not the GH boost. Giving ghrelin to fish raised their blood levels of LH and GH for a short time.
Abstract
We studied the in vitro and in vivo effects of octanoylated goldfish ghrelin peptides (gGRL-19 and gGRL-12) on luteinizing hormone (LH) and growth hormone (GH) release in goldfish. gGRL-19 and gGRL-12 at picomolar doses stimulated LH and GH release from dispersed goldfish pituitary cells in perifusion and static incubation. Incubation of pituitary cells for 2 h with 10 nM gGRL-12 and 1 or 10 nM gGRL-19 increased LH-beta mRNA expression, whereas only 10 nM gGRL-19 increased GH mRNA expression. Somatostatin-14 abolished the stimulatory effects of ghrelin on GH release from dispersed pituitary cells in perifusion and static culture. The GH secretagogue receptor antagonist d-Lys(3)-GHRP-6 inhibited the ghrelin-induced LH release, whereas no effects were found on stimulation of GH release by ghrelin. Intracerebroventricular injection of 1 ng/g body wt of gGRL-19 or intraperitoneal injection of 100 ng/g body wt of gGRL-19 increased serum LH levels at 60 min after injection, whereas significant increases in GH levels were found at 15 and 30 min after these treatments. Our results indicate that, in addition to its potent stimulatory actions on GH release, goldfish ghrelin peptides have the novel function of stimulating LH release in goldfish.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-03-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1152/ajpregu.00669.2003