GHRH antagonist causes DNA damage leading to p21 mediated cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in human colon cancer cells.
Hohla. Florian F; Buchholz. Stefan S; Schally. Andrew V AV; Seitz. Stefan S; Rick. Ferenc G FG; Szalontay. Luca L; Varga. Jozsef L JL; Zarandi. Marta M; Halmos. Gabor G; Vidaurre. Irving I; Krishan. Awtar A; Kurtoglu. Metin M; Chandna. Sudhir S; Aigner. Elmar E; Datz. Christian C
Key Findings
- GHRH antagonist JMR‑132 binds to receptors on colon cancer cells and inhibits their growth in lab dishes.
- The drug causes DNA damage, mitochondrial loss, p53 activation and p21‑mediated S‑phase arrest, leading to apoptosis.
- In mouse models, JMR‑132 reduced tumor volume by up to 75% and slowed tumor growth.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this research isn’t directly actionable—there’s no safe dosage or protocol for healthy individuals, and the compound is an experimental cancer drug, not a supplement. It mainly serves as a warning that interfering with GHRH signaling can have strong anti‑cancer effects, but it isn’t relevant for everyday longevity or performance optimization.
Summary
The study shows that a synthetic molecule that blocks growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (GHRH) can damage DNA in colon‑cancer cells, trigger cell‑death pathways, and shrink tumors in mice, but it doesn’t tell you how to use it for health‑boosting or longevity in normal people.
Abstract
We investigated the mechanisms of inhibitory effect of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) antagonist JMR-132 on the growth of HT29, HCT-116 and HCT-15 human colon cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. High-affinity binding sites for GHRH and mRNA for GHRH and splice variant-1 (SV1) of the GHRH receptor were found in all three cell lines tested. Proliferation of HT-29, HCT-116 and HCT-15 cells was significantly inhibited in vitro by JMR-132. Time course studies revealed that the treatment of human HCT-116 colon cancer cells with 10 muM GHRH antagonist JMR-132 causes a significant DNA damage as shown by an increase in olive tail moment (OTM) and loss of inner mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta Psi m). Western blotting demonstrated a time-dependent increase in protein levels of phospho-p53 (Ser46), Bax, cleaved caspase-9, -3, cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP) and a decrease in Bcl-2 levels. An augmentation in cell cycle checkpoint protein p21(Waf1/Cip1) was accompanied by a cell cycle arrest in S-phase. DNA fragmentation visualized by the comet assay and the number of apoptotic cells increased time dependently as determined by flow cytometric annexinV and PI staining assays. In vivo, JMR-132 decreased the volume of HT-29, HCT-116 and HCT-15 tumors xenografted into athymic mice up to 75% (p < 0.05) and extended tumor doubling time (p < 0.001). Our observations suggest that GHRH antagonist JMR-132 exerts its antiproliferative effect on experimental colon cancer cells through p21(Waf1/Cip1) mediated S-phase arrest along with apoptosis involving the intrinsic pathway.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-10-03T00:00:00.000Z
10.4161/cc.8.19.9698
46
23