GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Development of growth hormone secretagogues.
Smith. Roy G RG
Key Findings
- GHS (including GHRP‑6) increase GH pulse amplitude by four different pathways.
- Elderly subjects given GHS showed higher bone mineral density, increased lean mass, and modest strength improvements.
- In old mice, GHS restored thymic function, suggesting immune‑system benefits.
- The GHS‑R receptor was identified and linked to the natural hormone ghrelin, confirming GHS act as ghrelin mimetics.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, GHRP‑6 can be used as a tool to naturally raise GH levels, potentially supporting muscle maintenance, bone health, and immune function as part of an anti‑aging regimen. Timing doses to mimic natural GH pulses (e.g., before sleep) may maximize benefits, but users should monitor for side‑effects and consider the need for injection rather than oral intake.
Summary
Growth‑hormone secretagogues like GHRP‑6 can boost the body’s natural GH release, giving older people a hormone pattern similar to a young adult. This rise in GH leads to more bone density, lean muscle, modest strength gains, faster fracture healing, and even better immune‑system (thymus) function in animal studies.
Abstract
The GH secretagogues (GHS) were developed by reverse pharmacology. The objective was to develop small molecules with pharmacokinetics suitable for once-daily oral administration that would rejuvenate the GH/IGF-I axis. Neither the receptor nor the ligand that controlled pulse amplitude of hormone release was known; therefore, identification of lead structures was based on function. I reasoned that GH pulse amplitude could be increased by four possible mechanisms: 1) increasing GHRH release; 2) amplifying GHRH signaling in somatotrophs of the anterior pituitary gland; 3) reducing somatostatin release; and 4) antagonizing somatostatin receptor signaling. Remarkably, the GHS act through all four mechanisms to reproduce a young adult physiological GH profile in elderly subjects that was accompanied by increased bone mineral density and lean mass, modest improvements in strength, and improved recovery from hip fracture. Furthermore, restoration of thymic function was induced in old mice. The GHS receptor (GHS-R) was subsequently identified by expression cloning and found to be a previously unknown G protein-coupled receptor expressed predominantly in brain, pituitary gland, and pancreas. Reverse pharmacology was completed when the cloned GHS-R was exploited to identify an endogenous agonist (ghrelin) and a partial agonist (adenosine); ghsr-knockout mice studies confirmed that GHS are ghrelin mimetics.
Study Information
pubmed
2005
2005-04-06T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/er.2004-0019