Activation of growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) receptor stimulates cardiac reverse remodeling after myocardial infarction (MI).
Kanashiro-Takeuchi. Rosemeire M RM; Takeuchi. Lauro M LM; Rick. Ferenc G FG; Dulce. Raul R; Treuer. Adriana V AV; Florea. Victoria V; Rodrigues. Claudia O CO; Paulino. Ellena C EC; Hatzistergos. Konstantinos E KE; Selem. Sarah M SM; Gonzalez. Daniel R DR; Block. Norman L NL; Schally. Andrew V AV; Hare. Joshua M JM
Key Findings
- GHRH‑agonist JI‑38 improved heart function and reduced scar size in rats with chronic heart attacks
- The treatment increased heart cell and stem‑cell division without raising systemic growth hormone or IGF‑1
- Blocking the GHRH receptor with MIA‑602 cancelled the benefits, confirming a receptor‑mediated effect
Practical Outcomes
- This research is still early‑stage animal work, so it isn’t ready for personal use or dosing guidance. It does suggest that targeting the GHRH receptor could become a future strategy for heart repair, so biohackers should watch for human trials but not try the compound themselves now.
Summary
In a rat study, a drug that mimics the hormone that normally triggers growth hormone release (a GHRH‑agonist) was given a month after a heart attack and it helped the heart heal better, shrink the scar, and improve pumping ability, all without raising overall growth hormone levels. The benefits disappeared when a blocker of the same receptor was used, showing the effect is specific to that pathway.
Abstract
Both cardiac myocytes and cardiac stem cells (CSCs) express the receptor of growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH), activation of which improves injury responses after myocardial infarction (MI). Here we show that a GHRH-agonist (GHRH-A; JI-38) reverses ventricular remodeling and enhances functional recovery in the setting of chronic MI. This response is mediated entirely by activation of GHRH receptor (GHRHR), as demonstrated by the use of a highly selective GHRH antagonist (MIA-602). One month after MI, animals were randomly assigned to receive: placebo, GHRH-A (JI-38), rat recombinant GH, MIA-602, or a combination of GHRH-A and MIA-602, for a 4-wk period. We assessed cardiac performance and hemodynamics by using echocardiography and micromanometry derived pressure-volume loops. Morphometric measurements were carried out to determine MI size and capillary density, and the expression of GHRHR was assessed by immunofluorescence and quantitative RT-PCR. GHRH-A markedly improved cardiac function as shown by echocardiographic and hemodynamic parameters. MI size was substantially reduced, whereas myocyte and nonmyocyte mitosis was markedly increased by GHRH-A. These effects occurred without increases in circulating levels of growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor I and were, at least partially, nullified by GHRH antagonism, confirming a receptor-mediated mechanism. GHRH-A stimulated CSCs proliferation ex vivo, in a manner offset by MIA-602. Collectively, our findings reveal the importance of the GHRH signaling pathway within the heart. Therapy with GHRH-A although initiated 1 mo after MI substantially improved cardiac performance and reduced infarct size, suggesting a regenerative process. Therefore, activation of GHRHR provides a unique therapeutic approach to reverse remodeling after MI.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-12-27T00:00:00.000Z
10.1073/pnas.1119203109
70
34