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Sermorelin

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

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 1
2021 pubmed 14 citations

Agonist of growth hormone-releasing hormone enhances retinal ganglion cell protection induced by macrophages after optic nerve injury.

Cen. Ling-Ping LP; Ng. Tsz Kin TK; Liang. Jia-Jian JJ; Xu. Ciyan C; Zhuang. Xi X; Liu. Yu-Fen YF; Chen. Shao-Lang SL; Xu. Yanxuan Y; Yang. Qichen Q; Yuan. Xiang-Ling XL; Qin. Yong Jie YJ; Chan. Sun On SO; Chen. Haoyu H; Zhang. Mingzhi M; Schally. Andrew V AV; Pang. Chi Pui CP

Key Findings

  • GHRH receptors are present on retinal ganglion cells in adult rats
  • Both a GHRH agonist (MR‑409) and antagonist (MIA‑602) increased Akt signaling in the retina
  • The agonist MR‑409, but not the antagonist, activated microglia and further improved cell survival when combined with macrophage activation

Practical Outcomes

  • At this point there’s no actionable protocol for people; the work is limited to animal models and uses experimental compounds not available to consumers. It hints that GHRH‑like drugs might someday be explored for neuro‑protective purposes, but more research is needed before any dosage or safety guidance can be given.

Summary

A study in rats found that a drug that mimics growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (called MR‑409) can help protect eye nerve cells after injury, especially when the immune system is also activated. The same drug’s blocker (MIA‑602) reduced inflammation but didn’t boost protection as much. These results are early‑stage and not ready for human use.

Abstract

Optic neuropathies are leading causes of irreversible visual impairment and blindness, currently affecting more than 100 million people worldwide. Glaucoma is a group of optic neuropathies attributed to progressive degeneration of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). We have previously demonstrated an increase in survival of RGCs by the activation of macrophages, whereas the inhibition of macrophages was involved in the alleviation on endotoxin-induced inflammation by antagonist of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH). Herein, we hypothesized that GHRH receptor (GHRH-R) signaling could be involved in the survival of RGCs mediated by inflammation. We found the expression of GHRH-R in RGCs of adult rat retina. After optic nerve crush, subcutaneous application of GHRH agonist MR-409 or antagonist MIA-602 promoted the survival of RGCs. Both the GHRH agonist and antagonist increased the phosphorylation of Akt in the retina, but only agonist MR-409 promoted microglia activation in the retina. The antagonist MIA-602 reduced significantly the expression of inflammation-related genes <i>Il1b</i>, <i>Il6</i>, and <i>Tnf</i> Moreover, agonist MR-409 further enhanced the promotion of RGC survival by lens injury or zymosan-induced macrophage activation, whereas antagonist MIA-602 attenuated the enhancement in RGC survival. Our findings reveal the protective effect of agonistic analogs of GHRH on RGCs in rats after optic nerve injury and its additive effect to macrophage activation, indicating a therapeutic potential of GHRH agonists for the protection of RGCs against optic neuropathies especially in glaucoma.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-07-13T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1073/pnas.1920834118

Citations

14

References

42