GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Molecular analysis of rat pituitary and hypothalamic growth hormone secretagogue receptors.
McKee. K K KK; Palyha. O C OC; Feighner. S D SD; Hreniuk. D L DL; Tan. C P CP; Phillips. M S MS; Smith. R G RG; Van der Ploeg. L H LH; Howard. A D AD
Key Findings
- The rat GHS‑R gene was isolated and encodes a 364‑amino‑acid, 7‑transmembrane protein >90% identical to human and swine receptors.
- The receptor contains a single intron, matching the structure found in the human GHS‑R gene.
- The cloned receptor binds the GHS‑R ligand [35S]MK‑0677 with a dissociation constant of 0.7 nM, indicating very high affinity and functional activity in HEK‑293 cells.
- Expression of the receptor is specific to pituitary and hypothalamic tissue, the key sites for growth‑hormone regulation.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study validates that GHRP‑6 works through a well‑characterized receptor in the brain and pituitary, supporting its use as a GH‑releasing agent. However, the paper provides no new dosing guidelines, safety data, or performance protocols, so its direct impact on everyday regimens is limited.
Summary
Scientists cloned the rat version of the growth‑hormone‑secretagogue receptor (GHS‑R) and showed it is almost identical to the human receptor, sits in the pituitary and hypothalamus, and binds GHRP‑6‑like compounds with very high affinity. This confirms the basic mechanism by which GHRP‑6 can trigger growth‑hormone release.
Abstract
GH release is thought to occur under the reciprocal regulation of two hypothalamic peptides, GH releasing hormone (GHRH) and somatostatin, via their engagement with specific cell surface receptors on the anterior pituitary somatotroph. In addition, GH-releasing peptides, such as GHRP-6 and the nonpeptide mimetics, L-692,429 and MK-0677, stimulate GH release through their activation of a distinct receptor, the GH secretagogue receptor (GHS-R). The recent cloning of the GHS-R from human and swine pituitary gland identifies yet a third G protein-coupled receptor (GPC-R) involved in the control of GH release and further supports the existence of an undiscovered hormone that may activate this receptor. Using the human GHS-R as a probe, we report the isolation of a rat pituitary GHS-R cDNA derived from an unspliced, precursor mRNA. The rat cDNA encodes a protein of 364 amino acids containing seven transmembrane domains (7-TM) with >90% sequence identity to both the human and swine GHS-Rs. A single intron of approximately 2 kb divides the open reading frame into two exons encoding TM 1-5 and TM 6-7, thus placing the GHS-R into the intron-containing class of GPC-Rs. The intron maps to the site of sequence divergence between the human and swine type 1a and 1b GHS-R mRNAs. In addition, determination of the nucleotide sequence for the human GHS-R gene confirmed the position of an intron in the human GHS-R gene at this position. A full-length contiguous cDNA from rat hypothalamus was isolated and shown to be identical in its nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequence to the rat pituitary GHS-R. The cloned rat GHS-R binds [35S]MK-0677 with high affinity [dissociation constant (K(D)) = 0.7 nM] and is functionally active when expressed in HEK-293 cells. Expression of the rat GHS-R was observed specifically in the pituitary and hypothalamus when compared with control tissues.
Study Information
pubmed
1997
10.1210/mend.11.4.9908