Radioimmunoassay of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) with a polyclonal antibody against synthetic GHRH(1-29)-Gly4-Cys-NH2: method and clinical studies.
Zhang. C Y CY; Yamasaki. R R; Mitsuhashi. S S; Takahashi. H H; Bando. H H; Saito. S S
Key Findings
- The new radioimmunoassay can detect as little as 1.5 pg of GHRH per tube (about 5 ng/L in plasma).
- Average plasma GHRH in healthy adults is 20.5 ± 6.5 ng/L; it is slightly lower in hypothalamic disorders and markedly higher in chronic kidney‑failure patients (38.7 ± 13.1 ng/L).
- A patient with an ectopic GHRH‑producing tumor had astronomically high levels (up to 7,100 ng/L), which fell rapidly after surgery.
- Somatostatin can suppress GHRH release from tumor cells in vitro, showing a regulatory effect.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study doesn’t give dosing tips or performance protocols for GHRH; it simply provides a way to measure the hormone accurately. Knowing that GHRH levels vary with disease states may be interesting, but the findings aren’t directly actionable for everyday longevity or performance experiments.
Summary
Scientists created a very sensitive blood test to measure the hormone GHRH and used it to see how much of the hormone is in healthy people and in several disease groups. They found normal levels around 20 ng/L, higher levels in kidney‑failure patients, and extremely high levels in a rare tumor case. The study mainly shows the test works, not how to use GHRH for performance or health.
Abstract
A radioimmunoassay (RIA) for growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) using a polyclonal antibody against synthetic GHRH(1-29)-Gly4-Cys-NH2 has been developed. The antiserum (RBM105) showed full cross-reactivity with GHRH-(1-44)NH2, GHRH-(1-40)OH, GHRH-(1-37)OH and GHRH-(3-44)NH2, and probably recognized the region of Ala4 to Lys12 of GHRH. Since the sensitivity of the GHRH RIA was 1.5 pg/tube, the lowest detectable plasma level was 5 ng/l when an extract of 0.3 ml of plasma per tube was used. On gelfiltration chromatography, the GHRH immunoreactivity of normal plasma was eluted in the same position as synthetic GHRH. The plasma GHRH concentration in healthy subjects was 20.5 +/- 6.5 ng/l (mean +/- SD), and in patients with hypothalamic disorders was 17.4 +/- 2.0 ng/l. In contrast, the plasma GHRH level in hemodialysis-dependent, chronic renal failure (CRF-HD) patients (38.7 +/- 13.1 ng/l) was significantly higher than normal. The acromegalic patients were 24.3 +/- 11.9 ng/l, except for one patient with ectopic GHRH syndrome (990 ng/l): his plasma GHRH level reached 7,100 ng/l during operation, and then decreased logarithmically to 70 ng/l after 6 h. Somatostatin at concentrations of 10 and 1,000 nmol/l significantly suppressed (GHRH release) from primary culture cells of the GHRH-producing tumor from 17.3 +/- 0.92 ng/2 x 10(5) cells to 9.98 +/- 3.61 and 4.32 +/- 1.01 ng/2 x 10(5) cells, respectively after 48 h. These data indicate that this GHRH RIA is useful for determining the plasma GHRH concentration in normal and diseased states and also for in vitro studies of GHRH release.
Study Information
pubmed
1991
1991-10-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/0009-8981(91)90055-h