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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
1989 pubmed

Inhibition of pulsatile growth hormone (GH) secretion and somatic growth in immature rats with a synthetic GH-releasing factor antagonist.

Lumpkin. M D MD; Mulroney. S E SE; Haramati. A A

Key Findings

  • The GRF‑1‑29 antagonist (100‑400 µg/kg) eliminated the two main daily bursts of GH in immature rats.
  • Repeated dosing (100 µg/kg twice daily for 4 days) halted rapid weight gain and reduced growth of body length, heart, and kidneys.
  • Food intake and fecal output remained unchanged, indicating the growth suppression was due to reduced GH, not reduced nutrition.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study shows that a GRF‑1‑29 antagonist can effectively blunt GH pulses and growth in a rodent model, but there is no human data. It suggests that using this peptide to lower GH in people would be experimental and may affect growth or metabolism, so it’s not ready for real‑world protocols. More research is needed before any dosage or safety recommendations can be made for humans.

Summary

In young rats, a synthetic peptide that blocks the growth‑hormone‑releasing factor (GRF‑1‑29) stopped the normal spikes of growth hormone and slowed down body, organ, and tail growth without changing how much they ate.

Abstract

We previously reported that systemic administration of the recently described GRF peptide antagonist (N-Ac-Tyr1,D-Arg2)GRF-(1-29)-NH2 to adult male rats would suppress the pulsatile release of GH. In the present study, we have sought to determine whether this same antagonist would be efficacious in immature male rats to block spontaneous GH secretion and, as a result, retard several parameters of somatic growth. Indwelling Silastic catheters were placed into the jugular veins of immature male rats (120-140 g) at 29 days of age. After a recovery period of 48 h, beginning at 1000 h, 100-400 micrograms/kg GRF antagonist or its vehicle (controls) were injected iv immediately after withdrawing an initial blood sample from conscious undisturbed animals. Subsequent samples were obtained every 20 min until 1520 h. Red blood cells were resuspended in a restorative volume of saline and reinjected after each blood sample. Results showed that both doses of antagonist prevented the two major periods of episodic GH release observed in controls. For example, mean plasma GH (+/- SEM; nanograms per ml) at 1120 h was 9.0 +/- 2.7 in antagonist-treated rats and 37.1 +/- 5.1 in controls (P less than 0.05). Mean plasma GH (+/- SEM) at 1340 h was 10.8 +/- 3.7 in antagonist-treated rats and 38.8 +/- 9.6 in controls (P less than 0.05). Injection of 400 micrograms/kg of the structurally related VIP antagonist (N-Ac-Tyr1,D-Phe2)GRF-(1-29)-NH2, iv failed to suppress spontaneous GH release. GRF antagonist (100 micrograms/kg) was next administered twice daily iv for 4 days to 31-day-old rats in metabolic cages. This treatment essentially arrested the normal rapid body weight gain, significantly suppressed increases in body and tail lengths, and reduced increases in heart and kidney weights (P less than 0.01). Food intake and fecal output were unchanged by antagonist treatment and, therefore, did not contribute to the observed effects. These results support the idea that a number of tissues and organs are stimulated by the pulsatile secretion of GH and that a peptidic GRF receptor antagonist is useful in blocking episodic GH release in immature animals. As a consequence, this specific antagonist is effective in suppressing numerous aspects of somatic growth.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1989

DOI

10.1210/endo-124-3-1154