Pulsatile growth hormone secretion persists in genetic growth hormone-releasing hormone resistance.
Maheshwari. Hiralal G HG; Pezzoli. Suzan S SS; Rahim. Asad A; Shalet. Stephen M SM; Thorner. Michael O MO; Baumann. Gerhard G
Key Findings
- GH pulses continue in people lacking functional GHRH receptors, but the pulse size is <1% of normal
- Nighttime GH release is higher than daytime, likely due to reduced somatostatin inhibition
- Residual GH pulsatility may be driven by somatostatin, ghrelin, or intrinsic pituitary rhythms
Practical Outcomes
- Hexarelin, which mimics GHRH, will only be effective if your GHRH receptors work properly. To boost GH you might combine GHRH analogs with strategies that lower somatostatin (e.g., fasting, sleep) or add ghrelin‑like agents. Timing doses for nighttime could enhance the natural GH surge.
Summary
Even without the normal growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (GHRH) receptor, the body still makes tiny, regular bursts of growth hormone, especially at night. This shows that other signals like somatostatin and ghrelin can drive GH pulses, but the overall amount is extremely low without a functional GHRH pathway.
Abstract
Growth hormone (GH) secretion is regulated by GH-releasing hormone (GHRH), somatostatin, and possibly ghrelin, but uncertainty remains about the relative contributions of these hypophysiotropic factors to GH pulsatility. Patients with genetic GHRH receptor (GHRH-R) deficiency present an opportunity to examine GH secretory dynamics in the selective absence of GHRH input. We studied circadian GH profiles in four young men homozygous for a null mutation in the GHRH-R gene by use of an ultrasensitive GH assay. Residual GH secretion was pulsatile, with normal pulse frequency, but severely reduced amplitude (<1% normal) and greater than normal process disorder (as assessed by approximate entropy). Nocturnal GH secretion, both basal and pulsatile, was enhanced compared with daytime. We conclude that rhythmic GH secretion persists in an amplitude-miniaturized version in the absence of a GHRH-R signal. The nocturnal enhancement of GH secretion is likely mediated by decreased somatostatin tone. Pulsatility of residual GH secretion may be caused by oscillations in somatostatin and/or ghrelin; it may also reflect intrinsic oscillations in somatotropes.
Study Information
pubmed
2002
10.1152/ajpendo.00537.2001