Synthesis of potent antagonists of receptors for growth hormone-releasing hormone with antitumor and anti-inflammatory activity.
Cai. Renzhi R; Zhang. Xianyang X; Wang. Haibo H; Cui. Tengjiao T; Halmos. Gabor G; Sha. Wei W; He. Jinlin J; Popovics. Petra P; Vidaurre. Irving I; Zhang. Chongxu C; Mirsaeidi. Mehdi M; Schally. Andrew V AV
Key Findings
- Modified GHRH antagonists (AVR series) bind the pituitary receptor 2‑4× stronger than the previous lead (MIA‑602).
- Several AVR analogs inhibited tumor cell growth in vitro and slowed tumor growth in mouse models of many cancers, with AVR‑353 and AVR‑352 showing the best results.
- AVR‑352 also reduced inflammation in mouse lung tissue and both AVR‑352 and AVR‑353 suppressed growth‑hormone release more than the older compound.
Practical Outcomes
- These findings are not ready for personal use; they are early‑stage pre‑clinical results in animals. No safe human dosage or protocol is provided, so biohackers should not try these compounds for longevity or performance.
Summary
Scientists made new versions of a molecule that blocks the hormone that tells the body to release growth hormone. In mice and cell tests, some of these blockers stopped cancer cells from growing and reduced inflammation better than an older version, but the work is still early and only in labs, not in people.
Abstract
The syntheses and biological evaluation of GHRH antagonists of AVR series with high anticancer and anti-inflammatory activities are described. Compared to our previously reported GHRH antagonist 602 of MIAMI series, AVR analogs contain additional modifications at positions 0, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 20, 21, 29 and 30, which induce greater antitumor activities. Five of nineteen tested AVR analogs presented binding affinities to the membrane GHRH receptors on human pituitary, 2-4-fold better than MIA-602. The antineoplastic properties of these analogs were evaluated in vitro using proliferation assays and in vivo in nude mice xenografted with various human cancer cell lines including lung (NSCLC-ADC HCC827 and NSCLC H460), gastric (NCI-N87), pancreatic (PANC-1 and CFPAC-1), colorectal (HT-29), breast (MX-1), glioblastoma (U87), ovarian (SK-OV-3 and OVCAR-3) and prostatic (PC3) cancers. In vitro AVR analogs showed inhibition of cell viability equal to or greater than MIA-602. After subcutaneous administration at 5 μg/day doses, some AVR antagonists demonstrated better inhibition of tumor growth in nude mice bearing various human cancers, with analog AVR-353 inducing stronger suppression than MIA-602 in lung, gastric, pancreatic and colorectal cancers and AVR-352 in ovarian cancers and glioblastoma. Both antagonists induced greater inhibition of GH release than MIA-602 in vitro in cultured rat pituitary cells and in vivo in rats. AVR-352 also demonstrated stronger anti-inflammatory effects in lung granulomas from mice with lung inflammation. Our studies demonstrate the merit of further investigation of AVR GHRH antagonists and support their potential use for clinical therapy of human cancers and other diseases.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-12-21T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.peptides.2021.170716
22
69