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Mod GRF 1-29

Sermorelin, Growth Hormone Releasing Hormone (1-29), hGRF(1-29)NH2

Quick Stats
Studies 227
Trials 47
Score 2
1990 pubmed

Active immunization of pigs against growth hormone-releasing factor: effect on concentrations of growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor 1.

Armstrong. J D JD; Esbenshade. K L KL; Johnson. J L JL; Coffey. M T MT; Heimer. E E; Campbell. R M RM; Mowles. T T; Felix. A A

Key Findings

  • Active immunization against GRF‑1‑29 generated high‑titer antibodies in pigs.
  • Antibody presence eliminated the normal episodic release of growth hormone.
  • Average GH levels fell modestly, and IGF‑1 concentrations were reduced by week 14.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers who use GRF‑1‑29 to boost growth hormone, the study warns that the body can develop antibodies that blunt the peptide’s effect, potentially reducing its efficacy over time. Monitoring for immune responses or rotating peptides might be advisable, but the research does not provide a direct new dosing protocol.

Summary

In a pig study, scientists gave the animals a vaccine that made their bodies produce antibodies against the growth‑hormone‑releasing factor peptide (GRF‑1‑29). The vaccine blocked the normal spikes of growth hormone and lowered IGF‑1 levels, showing that the immune system can neutralize this peptide.

Abstract

Cyclic gilts (96 +/- 1 kg) were used to determine the effect of active immunization against growth hormone-releasing factor GRF(1-29)-NH2 on concentrations of growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). Gilts were immunized against GRF conjugated to human serum albumin (GRF-HSA, n = 5) or HSA alone at 180 d of age (wk 0). Booster doses were administered at wk 9 and 13. Seven days after the second booster (wk 14), blood samples were collected at 15-min intervals for 6 h before feeding and 30, 60, 120, 180 and 240 min after feeding. Eight days after the second booster, all gilts were administered a GRF analog, [desNH2Tyr1,Ala15]-GRF(1-29)-NH2, followed by an opioid agonist, FK33-824. Blood samples were collected at 15-min intervals from -30 to 240 min after injection. Immunization against GRF-HSA resulted in antibody titers, expressed as dilution required to bind 50% of [125I]GRF, ranging from 1:11,000 to 1:60,000 (wk 11 and 14); binding was not detectable or was less than 50% at 1:100 in HSA gilts (P less than .05). Episodic release of GH was abolished by immunization against GRF-HSA (P less than .05). Mean GH was decreased (P less than .07), but basal GH concentrations were not altered (P greater than .15) by immunization against GRF-HSA. Serum concentrations of IGF-1 were similar at wk 0, but concentrations were lower in GRF-HSA than in HSA gilts (P less than .05) at wk 14.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1990

DOI

10.2527/1990.682427x