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Gonadorelin

GnRH, Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone, LHRH, Factrel

Quick Stats
Studies 192
Trials 100
Score 2
2025 pubmed

The Involvement of the Peptidergic Systems in Breast Cancer Development.

Sánchez. Manuel L ML; Robinson. Prema P; Italia. Zal Z; Hoang. Tan T; Muñoz. Miguel M; Coveñas. Rafael R

Key Findings

  • Breast cancer cells have many peptide receptors, and GnRH is among the peptides that can affect tumor behavior.
  • Both GnRH agonists (e.g., goserelin) and antagonists are being investigated for anti‑cancer effects such as reducing cell growth and spread.
  • A range of peptide‑based strategies (receptor silencing, antibody‑drug conjugates, peptide‑loaded carriers) are under development for breast cancer treatment.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the main takeaway is that GnRH‑based drugs are currently in clinical research for breast cancer, not for self‑administration. There’s no clear protocol or safe dosage for using gonadorelin to influence cancer risk or longevity, so it remains a topic to watch rather than act on now.

Summary

The paper reviews how many different peptides, including the hormone GnRH (also called gonadorelin), interact with breast cancer cells. Some peptides can help tumors grow, while others can slow them down. GnRH and drugs that mimic or block it are being studied as possible anti‑cancer tools, but the review doesn’t give specific dosing or home‑use instructions.

Abstract

The current known data on the involvement of the peptidergic systems in breast cancer progression is overwhelmingly vast. Peptidergic systems are useful tools for imaging, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of breast cancer. These systems play a crucial role in both basic and clinical breast cancer research by enabling the exploration of novel molecular mechanisms, signaling pathways, and the development of effective drug design strategies. Breast cancer cells overexpress peptide receptors; at the same time they are known to interact with peptides that (a) exert an oncogenic action (adrenomedullin 2, endothelin, gastrin-releasing peptide, neurokinin A, neuromedin, neuropeptide Y, neurotensin, substance P, vasoactive intestinal peptide), (b) exert an anticancer action (angiotensin (1-7), ghrelin, peptide YY) or (c) exert dual oncogenic and anticancer effects (adrenomedullin, angiotensin II, bradykinin, corticotropin-releasing factor, β-endorphin, glucagon-like peptide 1, gonadotropin-releasing hormone, kisspeptin, methionine-enkephalin, oxytocin). This indicates that peptides, as well as peptide receptor agonists and antagonists, may serve as antitumor agents due to their diverse actions against breast cancer development, including the inhibition of cell proliferation, migration and invasion, induction of apoptosis, and anti-angiogenesis. Multiple strategies have been developed to combat breast cancer, including peptide receptor silencing; antibodies conjugated to specific signaling proteins; antibodies targeting specific peptide receptors or oncogenic peptides; and the use of peptides or peptide receptor agonists/antagonists loaded with antitumor cargo. Future lines of research are suggested in breast cancer using promising anti-breast-cancer peptide receptor antagonists (HOE-140, exendin (9-39), bosentan, macitentan, PD168,368, CGP71,683A, SR48,692, aprepitant) or agonists (FR190,997, semaglutide, exendin 4, goserelin) mentioned in this review. Peptidergic systems have tremendous anti-breast-cancer clinical potential which must be exploited and developed. Taken together, the available data highlight the enormous promise of translational research into breast cancer and peptidergic systems for the development of effective treatments. A full understanding of the roles played by the peptidergic systems in breast cancer will serve to improve diagnosis and treatment.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-11-14T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/cancers17223662

References

287