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Sermorelin

GHRH (1-29), GRF 1-29 NH2, Sermorelin acetate

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
2018 pubmed 19 citations

A new approach to the treatment of acute myeloid leukaemia targeting the receptor for growth hormone-releasing hormone.

Jimenez. Joaquin J JJ; DelCanto. Gina M GM; Popovics. Petra P; Perez. Aymee A; Vila Granda. Ailin A; Vidaurre. Irving I; Cai. Ren-Zhi RZ; Rick. Ferenc G FG; Swords. Ronan T RT; Schally. Andrew V AV

Key Findings

  • GHRH receptors are present on most tested AML cell lines and on all patient samples examined
  • The GHRH antagonist MIA‑602 reduces AML cell proliferation, triggers pro‑apoptotic genes, and blocks Akt signaling
  • MIA‑602 treatment dramatically shrinks tumor growth in mice bearing human AML xenografts

Practical Outcomes

  • The study focuses on a cancer‑specific GHRH antagonist, not on sermorelin or any regimen that biohackers could safely use for longevity or performance. It remains pre‑clinical, so there are no actionable dosing or protocol recommendations for the community.

Summary

Scientists discovered that blocking the growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (GHRH) receptor can slow the growth of certain leukemia cells in lab tests and in mice, and the same receptor is found in patient leukemia samples.

Abstract

Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) is secreted by the hypothalamus and acts on the pituitary gland to stimulate the release of growth hormone (GH). GHRH can also be produced by human cancers, in which it functions as an autocrine/paracrine growth factor. We have previously shown that synthetic antagonistic analogues of GHRH are able to successfully suppress the growth of 60 different human cancer cell lines representing over 20 cancers. Nevertheless, the expression of GHRH and its receptors in leukaemias has never been examined. Our study demonstrates the presence of GHRH receptor (GHRH-R) on 3 of 4 human acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cell lines-K-562, THP-1, and KG-1a-and significant inhibition of proliferation of these three cell lines in vitro following incubation with the GHRH antagonist MIA-602. We further show that this inhibition of proliferation is associated with the upregulation of pro-apoptotic genes and inhibition of Akt signalling in leukaemic cells. Treatment with MIA-602 of mice bearing xenografts of these human AML cell lines drastically reduced tumour growth. The expression of GHRH-R was further confirmed in 9 of 9 samples from patients with AML. These findings offer a new therapeutic approach to this malignancy and suggest a possible role of GHRH-R signalling in the pathology of AML.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-04-16T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/bjh.15207

Citations

19

References

31