GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Secretory mechanisms of growth hormone (GH)-releasing peptide-, GH-releasing hormone-, and thyrotropin-releasing hormone-induced GH release in patients with acromegaly.
Hanew. K K; Utsumi. A A; Tanaka. A A; Ikeda. H H; Yokogoshi. Y Y
Key Findings
- GHRP‑6 reliably stimulates GH release in patients with acromegaly both in the body and in isolated tumor cells.
- The hormone‑releasing effect of GHRP‑6 (and TRH) works mainly through the phosphatidylinositol‑protein kinase C pathway, while GHRH uses the adenylate cyclase‑protein kinase A pathway.
- NDGA, an inhibitor of the arachidonic cascade, blocks GH release induced by GHRP‑6, GHRH, and TRH, indicating the arachidonic cascade is involved in their action.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this confirms that GHRP‑6 can act as a GH secretagogue, but the data come from a tumor context, so dosing or safety insights for healthy people are limited. The study suggests that combining GHRP‑6 with agents that affect the PKC pathway might enhance GH release, yet more research in normal physiology is needed before applying these findings to everyday protocols.
Summary
The study shows that GHRP‑6, like GHRH and TRH, can directly trigger growth‑hormone release from pituitary tumors in people with acromegaly, using specific cell signaling pathways. It also finds that a drug called NDGA blocks this hormone release. However, the work was done in a disease setting, not in healthy volunteers.
Abstract
The GH secretory mechanism of GH-releasing hexapeptide (GHRP-6), GHRH, and TRH were studied in vivo and in vitro in seven patients with acromegaly. In an in vivo study, these patients showed clear GH responses to single administration of GHRP (four of four patients), GHRH (seven of seven patients), and TRH (seven of seven patients) and enhanced responses to GHRP plus GHRH (two of four patients) or TRH plus GHRH (six of six patients). In an in vitro dispersed cell study, the majority of patients examined also showed clear GH responses to GHRP (four of four patients), GHRH (six of six patients), and TRH (four of four patients) and an enhanced response to GHRP plus GHRH (three of three patients) or TRH plus GHRH (three of four patients). In one patient (no. 3), GHRP plus forskolin (adenylate cyclase activator), but not GHRP plus phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (protein kinase C activator), additively enhanced the GH response. Nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA; inhibitor of arachidonic cascade) inhibited GH release induced by GHRP, TRH, GHRH, TRH plus GHRH, or GHRP plus GHRH, but did not inhibit basal GH secretion. In contrast, NDGA distinctly elevated intracellular cAMP levels in another patient (no. 7) when coadministered with GHRP, GHRH, or GHRP plus GHRH, whereas cAMP levels were not modified by single administration of GHRP and NDGA. The GH response to the combined administration of GHRP and GHRH was synergistic in this patient, but was additive in the other two patients. It is concluded that GHRP, TRH, and GHRH directly stimulate in vivo and in vitro GH release from human somatotropinomas, and GHRP and TRH mainly exert their action through activation of the phosphatidylinositol-protein kinase C pathway, whereas GHRH exerts its action through the adenylate cyclase-protein kinase A pathway. These three agents seem to release GH via the arachidonic cascade.
Study Information
pubmed
1998
10.1210/jcem.83.10.5171