GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
In vitro characterization of four novel classes of growth hormone-releasing peptide.
Elias. K A KA; Ingle. G S GS; Burnier. J P JP; Hammonds. R G RG; McDowell. R S RS; Rawson. T E TE; Somers. T C TC; Stanley. M S MS; Cronin. M J MJ
Key Findings
- All four novel peptide classes (G‑7039, G‑7134, G‑7502, G‑7203) potently stimulate GH release with low nanomolar EC50 values.
- They act via the GHRP‑like receptor, synergize with GHRH but not with GHRP‑6, and are blocked by somatostatin.
- Desensitization occurs after about 45 minutes of exposure, while cells remain responsive to GHRH; they also raise intracellular calcium like GHRP‑6.
Practical Outcomes
- These findings hint that more potent GH‑secretagogues could be developed, but because the data are limited to cell cultures, there’s no actionable dosing or safety information for humans. Biohackers should wait for animal and clinical studies before considering these new compounds for personal use.
Summary
Scientists tested four new versions of the GH‑releasing peptide (like GHRP‑6) in rat pituitary cells and found they all trigger strong growth‑hormone release, work through the same receptor as GHRP‑6, and can boost the effect of another hormone (GHRH). However, the work was done only in a dish, not in animals or people, so it doesn’t give clear guidance for real‑world use yet.
Abstract
Reexamination of the hexapeptide GH-releasing peptide (GHRP-6) structure/function has lead to the development of four novel classes of compound that stimulate GH release. Each class is represented as follows: a pentapeptide, G-7039; a tetrapeptide, G-7134; a pseudotripeptide, G-7502; and a rigid cyclic heptapeptide, G-7203. The EC50 values for these compounds, determined by GH dose-response curves using primary cultures of rat pituitary cells, were 0.18, 0.34, 10.6, and 0.43 nM, respectively. To demonstrate that these compounds were acting at the putative GHRP receptor, challenges were made using combinations that included GHRP-6 and GH-releasing hormone (GHRH). All four new classes further increased GH release in combination with GHRH, but not with GHRP-6. Homologous desensitization occurred after 45 min of exposure to the new compounds while the cells remained sensitive to GHRH. Somatostatin inhibited all of these compounds. Additionally, G-7039 elevated free calcium, as occurs with GHRP-6. All four classes elicited a robust GH release, a small increase in PRL, and no change in LH, FSH, ACTH, or TSH. We conclude that these novel compounds are potent and direct stimulators of pituitary GH release, with in vitro attributes that suggest mediation via a specific GHRP-like mechanism.
Study Information
pubmed
1995
10.1210/endo.136.12.7588325