Inhibitory effects of antagonists of growth hormone-releasing hormone on growth and invasiveness of PC3 human prostate cancer.
Muñoz-Moreno. Laura L; Arenas. M Isabel MI; Schally. Andrew V AV; Fernández-Martínez. Ana B AB; Zarka. Elías E; González-Santander. Marta M; Carmena. María J MJ; Vacas. Eva E; Prieto. Juan C JC; Bajo. Ana M AM
Key Findings
- GHRH antagonists JMR‑132 and JV‑1‑38 reduced growth of prostate cancer cells in the lab and tumors in mice
- Treatment lowered levels of VEGF, HIF‑1α, and active MMP‑2/9, which are involved in tumor blood‑vessel growth and invasion
- Blocking GHRH increased membrane β‑catenin and decreased E‑cadherin, indicating changes in cell adhesion pathways
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the findings don’t translate into a new protocol for sermorelin or other GHRH‑based supplements. They simply highlight that inhibiting GHRH signaling can hinder certain cancers, suggesting caution but no direct action for those using GHRH agonists.
Summary
This study tested two chemicals that block the hormone that normally tells the body to release growth hormone. In mice with aggressive prostate cancer, these blockers slowed tumor growth and reduced markers linked to blood‑vessel formation and spread. The work is about cancer treatment, not about using growth‑hormone‑releasing peptides like sermorelin for health‑boosting purposes.
Abstract
New approaches are needed to the therapy of advanced prostate cancer. This study determined the effect of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) antagonists, JMR-132 and JV-1-38 on growth of PC3 tumors as well as on angiogenesis and metastasis through the evaluation of various factors that contribute largely to the progression of prostate cancer. Human PC3 androgen-independent prostate cancer cells were injected subcutaneously into nude mice. The treatment with JMR-132 (10 μg/day) or JV-1-38 (20 μg/day) lasted 41 days. We also evaluated the effects of JMR-132 and JV-1-38 on proliferation, cell adhesion and migration in PC-3 cells in vitro. Several techniques (Western blot, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, immunohistochemistry, ELISA and zymography) were used to evaluate the expression levels of GHRH receptors and its splice variants, GHRH, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1α, metalloproteinases (MMPs) -2 and -9, β-catenin and E-cadherin. GHRH antagonists suppressed the proliferation of PC-3 cells in vitro and significantly inhibited growth of PC3 tumors. After treatment with these analogues, we found an increase in expression of GHRH receptor accompanied by a decrease of GHRH levels, a reduction in both VEGF and HIF-1α expression and in active forms of MMP-2 and MMP-9, a significant increase in levels of membrane-associated β-catenin and a significant decline in E-cadherin. These results support that the blockade of GHRH receptors can modulate elements involved in angiogenesis and metastasis. Consequently, GHRH antagonists could be considered as suitable candidates for therapeutic trials in the management of androgen-independent prostate cancer.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-07-27T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/ijc.27716
18
52