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GHRP-6

Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2

Quick Stats
Studies 702
Trials 0
Score 3
1991 pubmed

Evidence for a role of protein kinase-C in His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2-induced growth hormone release from rat primary pituitary cells.

Cheng. K K; Chan. W W WW; Butler. B B; Barreto. A A; Smith. R G RG

Key Findings

  • GHRP‑6 and GRF together cause a stronger GH release than either alone.
  • Activating PKC with a compound (PMA) reproduces the GHRP‑6 boost, but an inactive PKC analog does not.
  • Inhibiting PKC blocks the GH‑releasing effect of GHRP‑6 but not the effect of GRF alone.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study suggests that GHRP‑6’s ability to raise GH levels relies partly on PKC activation. For biohackers, this means that combining GHRP‑6 with agents that safely enhance PKC signaling might improve its GH‑boosting effect, while drugs that inhibit PKC could blunt it. However, the data come from isolated rat cells, so real‑world dosing or safety implications for humans remain uncertain.

Summary

In rat pituitary cells, the peptide GHRP‑6 boosts growth‑hormone (GH) release and works best when combined with the natural GH‑releasing hormone (GRF). This effect depends on a cell‑signalling protein called protein kinase‑C (PKC); activating PKC mimics GHRP‑6, while blocking PKC stops GHRP‑6 from working.

Abstract

We have recently reported that His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2 (GHRP-6) synergizes with GH-releasing factor (GRF) to increase GH release and cAMP accumulation in rat pituitary cells in vitro. This study was undertaken to further investigate the mechanism of action of GHRP-6 on GH release, particularly the involvement of protein kinase-C. Forskolin (10(-5) M), A23187 (10(-6) M), and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA; 10(-7) M) all stimulated GH release. However, only PMA can mimic the synergistic effects of GHRP-6 on GRF-stimulated GH release and intracellular cAMP accumulation. 4 alpha-Phorbol 12,13-didecanoate, an inactive phorbol ester, was unable to stimulate GH release or potentiate the effect of GRF. Extracellularly added phospholipase-C not only stimulated GH release in a dose-dependent manner, but also potentiated GRF-induced GH release. Phloretin, a protein kinase-C inhibitor, in a concentration range of 10-250 microM had very little or no effect on basal and GRF-stimulated GH release, but markedly inhibited the stimulatory effects induced by either PMA or GHRP-6. Incubation of rat pituitary cells with 10(-6) M PMA for 24 h completely down-regulated protein kinase-C, since such PMA-pretreated cells did not release GH in response to a second dose of PMA. The protein kinase-C-depleted cells had an attenuated GHRP-6 response, but they responded normally to GRF. Moreover, the synergistic effects of GHRP-6 and GRF on GH release and cAMP accumulation were also greatly inhibited by protein kinase-C down-regulation. These data suggest that the effects of GHRP-6 on GH release, either alone or together with GRF, are at least partially mediated via the activation of protein kinase-C.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1991

DOI

10.1210/endo-129-6-3337